“We prioritise the parts of the business that have an outsized, positive effect”
How Reconome is delivering positive impact for the environment with its small team

For a team just 17 strong, tech recycling business, and certified B Corp, is having a positive impact on people and planet. A honoree in the Environment category, Reconome is a brilliant example of how putting the work in early, and leveraging smart partnerships with larger organisations, can magnify your impact.
You can think of Reconome like a triage department for electronic devices. The business collects redundant IT and infrastructure equipment from businesses and decides how to create a positive reuse case. That could be repairing or refurbishing them in house, sending them to a partner who鈥檚 better suited for the job or, if they are unsalvageable, onto an advanced recycling partner to recover any precious materials. If the devices are reusable, Reconome works with high impact social groups including charities and schools to put them in the hands of people who need them.
Nick Rawkins set up the business in 2018 after becoming disillusioned with corporate life. To Nick, the recycling business made fundamental commercial sense. It was a two-sided marketplace that dealt with motivated customers on both sides of the equation: donors and recipients. 鈥淪ocially, we live in an era where digital is becoming a fundamental human right,鈥 Nick says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e highly motivated to make this work on a large scale.鈥 And the business is well on the way to achieve that goal.
Focusing on its supply chain from the start
Scoring highly in the Environment category is no great surprise when it鈥檚 so ingrained in Reconome鈥檚 business model. 鈥淲e receive a stream of waste and we repurpose it so it becomes a product. That鈥檚 a net reduction of waste,鈥 says Nick. For a business that often works as a middle man, building a trusted supply chain has been critical. Right from the start, the business has been incredibly intentional when choosing which recycling partners to work with.
鈥淲e spent a huge amount of resources trying not to use generic waste management services,鈥 Nick says. With Lithium ion batteries, for example, Reconome found a company to recycle them directly rather than taking the easier route of working with a broker. Having full visibility of its supply chain is replicated when it comes to plastics and other metals too. Reconome onboard a new partner to work with every six months or so.
Having trust in its partners has allowed the business to focus on what it's good at. 鈥淵ou can trust their proposition resonates with what you鈥檙e trying to do,鈥 says Nick. 鈥淭ogether we鈥檙e able to achieve a superior outcome.鈥 Nick admits that early on, it was perhaps counterintuitive for a small business without that many devices to vet its supply chain so thoroughly. But it has served the business well. 鈥淲e鈥檙e glad we鈥檝e done that work because it鈥檚 work we don鈥檛 have to do now. And we have relationships we鈥檝e managed to build and maintain over several years.鈥
Using partnerships to increase its impact
Central to Reconome鈥檚 outsized impact has been working with large foundations that identify people in need and do it at scale 鈥 Reconome never actually works with the end user themselves. That tactic was actually initiated fortuitously when , a corporate and charity combination, reached out to them for help on a national scheme to generate donations of smartphones. Reconome wiped the data, refurbished, tested and shipped the phones out to different charity organisations. 鈥淲e found ourselves in the midst of this project taking over quite a bit of our operational capacity and attention,鈥 Nick says. 鈥淭he seed was planted.鈥
Since then, looking for partnerships with that scale of impact has become central to the business鈥 strategy.听 Dave Williams, Head of Business Development and Partnerships, researches other national scale foundations working on the same problem. To the business鈥 surprise, there are only 鈥渁 handful鈥 doing it. That means getting out there in person, and networking, has become increasingly important 鈥 though Nick is quick to point out there鈥檚 no guarantee. 鈥淛ust because you鈥檙e networking it doesn鈥檛 necessarily mean you鈥檙e going to get the opportunities. But it has allowed us to understand their thinking and submit a good response.鈥澨
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Using size as an advantage
When it comes to winning contracts, one of the things that actually works in Reconome鈥檚 favour is its size. 鈥淲e鈥檙e a lot smaller than some of the other companies we鈥檙e competing against,鈥 Nick says. 鈥淎 lot more nimble, a lot more responsive. We鈥檙e very motivated to make it work, which I don鈥檛 think you鈥檙e necessarily going to always get with a large company.鈥
And, of course, that nimbleness extends to how they operate when they do win contracts. Rather than flexing up and down with employees, the business flexes with those partners it's spent so long building relationships with. 鈥淲e鈥檙e building a network of partners and we鈥檙e relying on them when we need help with capacity,鈥 Nick adds. That ethos extends even to the B Corp Certification process itself. The company is supported by , a UK government agency that helps innovative businesses commercialise their products or services. One of its initiatives is a knowledge transfer project where an innovative business (like Reconome) and a university work together. That鈥檚 led to Reconome working with a post-graduate who takes on the responsibility of leading the B Corp Certification along with a larger mandate to help the businesses Reconome partners with to take measurable steps to improve their environmental and social performance.
As the business takes on more projects, Nick admits there鈥檒l come a time when it will need to build in more operational functions in house, and find a bigger space than the three railway arches they currently work from in Leytonstone, East London. Given the foundations and relationships the business has in place, it鈥檚 expansion the business seems perfectly set up for.
Nick鈥檚 B Corp lessons
1. Prioritise what鈥檚 most important
When it comes to making changes, Nick says it鈥檚 important to understand what really shifts the needle in terms of impact. 鈥淭he decision making process has been about what part of our business has an outsized, negative effect, and what part of our business has an outsized, positive effect. And prioritising. I think the best strategy is to figure out where those outsized effects are, then to try and fix those things first and gradually work your way through everything else.鈥
2. Don鈥檛 just jump through the hoops
鈥淵ou鈥檙e not just trying to do things for the sake of the accreditation,鈥 Nick says. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e actually implementing long lasting changes in your business. Understand why that question is there. What does it represent? How can you alter a business decision or process for an improved overall impact?鈥 He points to policies and documentation in particular. 鈥淎s soon as people hear 鈥榩olicy鈥 it turns them off. But it鈥檚 actually about creating an easily accessible and useful repository of information that helps people do what you want them to.鈥
3. Allocate responsibility
As Reconome has grown, the certification process has become much more of a shared responsibility. 鈥淲hen we first did our B Corp Certification, we didn鈥檛 have that much business so it wasn鈥檛 that much of a burden 鈥 now everyone鈥檚 plates are full,鈥 he says. 鈥淎llocating responsibility to multiple people in the team allows people to take charge of various aspects.鈥
To learn more about Reconome, head to its .