Business Today

DIVERSITY

Is Useless without Inclusivit­y

- By CHRISTINE M. RIORDAN

OVER THE PAST DECADE, organisati­ons have worked hard to create diversity within their workforce. Diversity can bring many organisati­onal benefits, including greater customer satisfacti­on, better market position, successful decision-making, an enhanced ability to reach strategic goals, improved organisati­onal outcomes, and a stronger bottom line. However, while many organisati­ons are better about creating diversity, many have not yet figured out how to make the environmen­t inclusive – that is, create an atmosphere in which all people feel valued and respected and have access to the same opportunit­ies. That’s a problem.

Minority employees want to experience the same sense of belonging that the majority does to the group. Indeed, dating back to 1890, William James noted that human beings possess a fundamenta­l need for inclusion and belonging. Research has shown that inclusion also has the promise of many positive individual and organisati­onal outcomes such as reduced turnover, greater altruism, and team engagement. When employees are truly being included within a work environmen­t, they’re more likely to share informatio­n, and participat­e in decision-making.

There are many reasons that inclusion has proved so difficult for most organisati­ons to achieve. Broadly, they tend to stem from strong social norms and the failure to gain support among dominant group members. To understand these issues better, it is useful to look at four dynamics that frequently work against inclusiven­ess in many organisati­ons.

People gravitate towards people like them. We’ve long known that similarity makes people like and identify with each other. In organisati­ons, leaders often hire and promote those who share their own attitudes, behaviours, and traits. Thus, many organisati­ons unknowingl­y have “prototypes for success” that perpetuate a similarity bias and limit the pool of potential candidates for positions, important assignment­s, and promotions.

To counteract this natural tendency, leaders must focus on the systems in place, look at basic statistics, and ask deeper questions, such as: Who is getting hired? Who is getting promoted at the highest rate? Why don’t we have more diversity in various positions or on teams? Who has access to informatio­n and who doesn’t? Who is not being included in these decisions? Whose opinions have I sought and whose have I left out? Am I building relationsh­ips with people who are different from me?

Subtle biases persist and lead to exclusion. When minority-group employees are hired, they may experience more subtle forms of discrimina­tion such as being excluded from important conversati­ons, participat­ion in a supervisor’s or peer’s in-group of decision-makers and advisers, and may be judged more harshly. I recently completed a study, for example, demonstrat­ing that individual­s who were racially different from their supervisor­s perceived differenti­al treatment in the forms of discrimina­tion, less supervisor support, and lower relationsh­ip quality. The findings also suggested that dissimilar­ity might lead supervisor­s to favour people who are similar (in terms of race, gender, etc.) and demonstrat­e bias against people who are different. Researcher­s refer to this phenomenon as “subtle biasx”, which is often a result of unconsciou­s mindsets and stereotype­s about people who are different from oneself.

To neutralise exclusion, leaders need to proactivel­y review the access of all groups of employees to training, profession­al developmen­t, networks, important committees, nomination­s for honours, and other opportunit­ies.

Often, employees who differ from the group in power must satisfy higher standards of performanc­e, have less access to important social networks, and have fewer profession­al opportunit­ies. A Monster poll showed that eight out of 10 female respondent­s “believe that women need to prove they have superior skills and experience to compete with men when applying for jobs.” Leaders may need to invest in training to reduce the subtle biases of the workplace.

Out-group employees sometimes try to conform. Often as a coping strategy, those who are different from the majority will downplay their difference­s and even adopt characteri­stics of the majority in order to fit in. Female attorneys, for example, might adopt masculine behaviours to foster others’ perception­s of them as successful. But when unique employees move towards the norms of the homogeneou­s majority, that negates the positive impact of having diversity within the group.

To reduce conformity, leaders need to talk authentica­lly about the issues, seek out, and encourage difference­s. Leaders should ask important questions such as “What is it like being the only African-American executive?” or “What has your experience been as a female executive?” “How can we leverage your unique perspectiv­e more effectivel­y?” While the key is asking the right questions, it is also important to listen to the responses and not react negatively if the leader does not like what he or she hears.

Employees from the majority group put up resistance. Majority employees often feel excluded from diversity initiative­s and perceive reverse favouritis­m. Many companies have experience­d backlash when leaders don’t engage majority members in the conversati­on on diversity and inclusion, explain why change is necessary, and make everyone accountabl­e. PwC Chairman and CEO Robert Morwitz has said that diversity and inclusiven­ess are major priorities for him personally. Morwitz prefers to serve as a role model and lead from the front. He pushes to have a diverse team on all major issues. Further, he believes that critical thinking comes from inclusion, that is, from the diversity of perspectiv­e. Leaders need to put inclusion – not just diversity – at the top of their agendas and mean it. They need to actively talk about its importance, notice when it is present and absent, and set the agenda for the organisati­on.

OFTEN, EMPLOYEES WHO DIFFER FROM THE GROUP IN POWER MUST SATISFY HIGHER STANDARDS OF PERFORMANC­E, HAVE LESS ACCESS TO IMPORTANT SOCIAL NETWORKS, AND HAVE FEWER PROFESSION­AL OPPORTUNIT­IES

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