Metis Consulting Group
New York, United States
February 2017
Other professional, scientific & tech
Service with Minor Environmental Footprint
United States
Metis Consulting Group is a certified Woman-Owned, Disability-Owned New Yorksoftware development and IT Management Consulting firm located in Central New York. Our service triad comprises Management Consulting, Enterprise Application Development, and Technical Operations. Their Management Consulting leg includes executive-level management and IT planning/facilitation, technical audits, and vendor relationship management. Enterprise Application Development includes back-end integration and content management, analytics, complex, data-driven web sites ad responsive design, email marketing, and rapid development of centrally-managed, individually-branded web services. Their Technical Operations offerings include large-scale portals to custom legacy software, legacy systems integration, day-to-day business operations support, database management, data integration, web services, and API integration/rapid development. All of this is made possible through the Metis Methodology, delivering a seamless end-to-end user experience from needs discovery and stakeholder buy-in to transparency of time, tasks, and cost. Metis builds thoughtful technology solutions with skill and clarity of purpose, fostered by a culture of respect, curiosity, and aspiration.
Overall B Impact Score
Governance 22.0
Governance evaluates a company's overall mission, engagement around its social/environmental impact, ethics, and transparency. This section also evaluates the ability of a company to protect their mission and formally consider stakeholders in decision making through their corporate structure (e.g. benefit corporation) or corporate governing documents.
What is this? A company with an Impact Business Model is intentionally designed to create a specific positive outcome for one of its stakeholders - such as workers, community, environment, or customers.
Governance 22.0
Governance evaluates a company's overall mission, engagement around its social/environmental impact, ethics, and transparency. This section also evaluates the ability of a company to protect their mission and formally consider stakeholders in decision making through their corporate structure (e.g. benefit corporation) or corporate governing documents.
What is this? A company with an Impact Business Model is intentionally designed to create a specific positive outcome for one of its stakeholders - such as workers, community, environment, or customers.
Workers 83.3
Workers evaluates a company’s contributions to its employees’ financial security, health & safety, wellness, career development, and engagement & satisfaction. In addition, this section recognizes business models designed to benefit workers, such as companies that are at least 40% owned by non-executive employees and those that have workforce development programs to support individuals with barriers to employment.
What is this? A company with an Impact Business Model is intentionally designed to create a specific positive outcome for one of its stakeholders - such as workers, community, environment, or customers.
Community 35.2
Community evaluates a company’s engagement with and impact on the communities in which it operates, hires from, and sources from. Topics include diversity, equity & inclusion, economic impact, civic engagement, charitable giving, and supply chain management. In addition, this section recognizes business models that are designed to address specific community-oriented problems, such as poverty alleviation through fair trade sourcing or distribution via microenterprises, producer cooperative models, locally focused economic development, and formal charitable giving commitments.
Environment 14.6
Environment evaluates a company’s overall environmental management practices as well as its impact on the air, climate, water, land, and biodiversity. This includes the direct impact of a company’s operations and, when applicable its supply chain and distribution channels. This section also recognizes companies with environmentally innovative production processes and those that sell products or services that have a positive environmental impact. Some examples might include products and services that create renewable energy, reduce consumption or waste, conserve land or wildlife, provide less toxic alternatives to the market, or educate people about environmental problems.
Customers 4.1
Customers evaluates a company’s stewardship of its customers through the quality of its products and services, ethical marketing, data privacy and security, and feedback channels. In addition, this section recognizes products or services that are designed to address a particular social problem for or through its customers, such as health or educational products, arts & media products, serving underserved customers/clients, and services that improve the social impact of other businesses or organizations.