Unmasking the reality of diversity, equity, and inclusion in the corporate world, we delve into the gap between rhetoric and action. We explore how businesses can transcend mere tokenism and truly embed these principles into their organizational fabric to drive substantial change.
Improving diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I)
Just 49 percent of employees say their companies have DE&I improvement strategies
- The situation in the U.S. is only slightly better
- Making workplaces truly diverse, fair, and inclusive has never been easy given inherent biases in everything from how companies source talent to how people interview and see themselves
Identify opportunities to create equity
Policies and processes perpetuate inequities and changing them will help bridge those gaps
- For instance, we looked at our job descriptions and found that the use of words like “strong” spoke more to men than to women. By changing job descriptions, we boosted the opportunity for Black women to apply.
Lead with proactive acts of inclusion
Call out microaggressions
- We all have biases, often because of how we were raised
- Counteracting biases by watching and changing our behavior
- Being more inclusive starts by recognizing and calling out biases that work against inclusion
Secure top-down and bottom-up commitment
You need champions at every level of the organization to push change forward
- This starts with leadership voicing support for DE&I initiatives and creating a runway for employees to drive efforts forward on the front lines
- At her workplace, they got this started by assembling a 21-member Global Diversity Advisory Council
Individualize learning
Meet people where they are
- Give them multiple ways to access learning, including in micro-segments, which can be as short as three minutes
- Allow for mistakes
- DE&I is a long journey, not a sprint, but it has to be started eventually
Get data
Listen to employees in focus groups discuss the state of DE&I at work.
- Do they feel a sense of belonging at work? If not, what do they need?
- Be transparent about how you will use the data and encourage leaders to share.