Collective Leisure Social Enterprise Accreditation renewed
One of the first things we did when we started Collective Leisure was to seek Social Enterprise accreditation with Social Traders - the Australian regulator. We are delighted to report that we have passed the rigorous recertification process for a second time after 24 months of trading.
Collective Leisure meets the Social Traders Social Enterprise definition for these three reasons:
Operates with a primary social, cultural or environmental purpose
Derives a substantial portion of revenue from trade
Reinvests profits towards its purpose such that public benefit outweighs
We believe we are leading the way in the sport, leisure and wellness sectors with an alternative model to what is currently being offered. Delivering on our purpose enabling well-being without boundaries and a mission to reduce health inequity in our communities.
David Burns Collective Leisure CEO explains,
“It’s such an exciting time for Social Enterprise with a National Strategy being formalised and Brisbane hosting the Social Enterprise World Forum later this month. We’re very proud of our accreditation renewed which means we’re a standard and recognised as a business for good”.
Andrew Marselos, Social Traders Procurement Lead NSW ACT, added “Collective Leisure has been a certified social enterprise since 2020. A social enterprise is a unique business that exists to create impact through trade, with purpose at the heart of what they do.”
Since the last re-certification 12 months ago, Collective Leisure has refined its service offering:
Training and Employment
Well-being programs
Adaptive sports programs
Influence systems change - WSYD Moving
Facilities management