An Actionable Approach to Building a More Diverse Workforce

Author: Oliver Morgan

28.01.2021

Read time: 8 minutes

Awareness of, and interest in, diversity and inclusion (D&I) has grown dramatically over the past decade. Organisations are investing in D&I-focused initiatives at unprecedented rates, with three in four describing it is a value or priority. This necessitates an actionable approach to building a more diverse workforce.

It is easy to see why. Clearly, there is a moral and ethical element to this; building a diverse and inclusive working environment is simply the right thing to do

Beyond this, there are numerous practical reasons for focusing on diversity. Numerous reports and studies have highlighted the benefits of D&I; to give just one example, Gartner found:

  • Organisations that are able to enact sustainable D&I strategies can achieve a 20% increase in organisational inclusion
  • This corresponds to a 6.2% increase in on-the-job effort, a 5% increase in employees’ intent to stay with the organisation, and a nearly 3% increase in individual performance

Dr. Reinhard Schiebeler, guest on season 2, episode 9 of our podcast series “Morgan Latif Presents”, understands the importance of D&I, having held leadership roles in companies including Philip Morris and Glatfelter. An expert in operational excellence and building powerful leadership teams, he explains:

“When you put together your team, they should be a very diverse team. This is what I strongly believe in and for that, you need different skills, different knowledge, experience, but even behaviour. 

“For success, it’s vital that they have common values. They need to trust and to pay respect to each other. Mutual respect is a fundamental thing, which you need to implement in a company.”

Despite extensive research and campaigning by leaders like Dr. Schiebeler, many businesses still fall short on D&I. PwC’s Global Diversity & Inclusion Survey found 79% of leadership engagement on D&I remains basic or emerging. Only 26% of organisations set D&I goals specifically for leaders.. Only 17% have a C-suite diversity role, and nearly 30% still have no D&I leader.

Practical Steps to Boost Your Diversity & Inclusion

Clearly, much work remains. With that in mind, we offer actionable guidance to help organisations lead on D&I.

1. Test for Biased Technology

Hiring managers and HR leaders can use many tools to attract and retain talent. These tools should simplify building diverse teams. Machines have no agenda and should focus on merit, ignoring human prejudice. However, technology is built by humans. Unconscious biases can embed themselves into the tools we use daily, causing harm. This concern is real. Numerous high-profile cases show technology displaying bias for or against specific groups. Examples include:

Any organisation that relies on technology as part of its talent acquisition and management functions must be prepared to scrutinise its tools for signs of bias.

Additionally, they should take steps to communicate their actions to employees and candidates. As we will demonstrate throughout this article, effective communication often holds the key to improving diversity and inclusion, yet it is an area in which many organisations fall short.

2. Involve Managers to Get Buy-in

D&I is nothing new. Workplace equality has been enshrined in law across European states for decades. 

During that time, countless organisations have implemented substantial change management programmes aimed at improving diversity and inclusion. Yet many have failed to deliver the expected results, with PwC finding that just 2% of European D&I initiatives ever reach full maturity across four key dimensions:

  • Understanding the facts of today
  • Building an inspirational strategy
  • Developing leadership engagement 
  • Creating sustainable movement

No doubt, the overwhelming majority of diversity and inclusion programmes start with the right intentions. So why do so many come up short? One key reason is a lack of buy-in from managers and other front-line figures. Experts often design initiatives before managers see them. The approach may clash with how work actually happens. If managers must add tasks and complexity to busy workloads, the strategy will likely fail to gain support. Managers, who communicate and implement D&I programs, should join the design process. This identifies practical concerns early. Addressing issues upfront prevents them from derailing the entire strategy.

3. Build a Leadership Team With Shared Values

Strong leadership is critical to the successful delivery of any ambitious change management programme, and D&I is no exception. As Dr. Reinhard Schiebeler tells us:

“If leadership remains poor you will not be successful, even if you apply the best tools, methods and processes. So, when you want to transform companies, you always need to start with leadership first, starting with the top level.”

Most organisations want to believe that their leadership teams share the same values, and use those values to work toward shared goals. But in reality, this is not always the case. Individuals may pay lip service to key values, but fail to live by them during times of stress or crisis. Or they may simply disagree with those values from the outset.

Building a leadership team around shared values requires effort and commitment; as with the previous point, it rarely works if those values are agreed upon and imposed from above, or drafted in isolation by a small subset of your leadership team. Instead, take the following steps:

  • Reflect as individuals: Every leadership will already have a set of unspoken values. Leaders should be given the opportunity to reflect on and define those values as individuals, while also considering other values that would be relevant and meaningful to their organisation.
  • Organise the results: Next, the team should come together to share the values they have drawn up. No ideas should be rejected at this stage. Sharing these values may prompt wider conversations that, in turn, result in more potential values. The results should be categorised, with duplicates removed, then placed in an agreed order of priority.
  • Draw up a shortlist together: All remaining values should be discussed as a group and used to draw up a shortlist on which everyone agrees.

4. Measure Performance

As with any other initiative, it is impossible to understand whether a D&I programme has been successful unless clear goals are defined in advance and performance toward those goals is tracked over time.

However, there are some key challenges with assessing the effectiveness of diversity and inclusion policies and initiatives. When it comes to measuring performance, consider the following:

Are Your Numbers Meaningful?

For example, an organisation may aim for a 50:50 male-to-female board split. At face value, this goal appears enviable and reflects society better than a board of only middle-aged white men. However, if leaders ignore female board members, they cannot make an impact. The organisation will remain no more diverse. In this case, subjective metrics may provide a truer understanding of performance.

Are Your Goals Specific?

Imagine an organisation targeting a 50:50 gender split across the workforce, not just the board. It may reach the target. Yet if women remain in traditionally female functions, like HR or marketing, change is minimal. Instead, organisations should set targets for specific areas to ensure meaningful diversity.

Are Your Targets Achievable?

Some sectors lack diverse candidates, meaning non-white, non-male employees are scarce. Facebook and other companies highlight this issue. Ambitious targets remain valuable, but organisations must ground them in reality. Short-term fixes cannot fully solve these shortages.

5. Communicate Your Efforts to Build Advocacy

No organisation wants its D&I programme secret. Diversity and inclusion attract positive attention. Employers should clearly share their approach, actions, and the results they aim to achieve.

However, many organisations are falling down on the seemingly simple act of communicating their D&I plans. Indeed, one survey found that only 42% of employees feel their organisation regularly makes available information on the diversity of leadership teams and the wider workforce.

This appears to be an issue of perception. Business leaders (63%) are far more likely to believe they are regularly communicating this key information. Furthermore, while just 10% of leaders say they are not communicating frequently with employees on D&I, this proportion climbs to:

  • 17% among employees
  • 17% among drivers of D&I programmes
  • 19% among HR professionals

There is no one-size-fits-all approach to discussing diversity and inclusion. However, it is clear that organisations must work harder to regularly communicate the goals and impact of their D&I strategies, in a format that resonates with their workforce.


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