At the HFS International Women’s Day Diversity and Inclusion Roundtable, a resounding point was continuously made: the current generation of senior managers and executives have long seen diversity and inclusion (D&I) initiatives as a political choice rather than a strategic necessity. The result is that too many enterprises are only paying lip service to promote diversity and inclusiveness in the workplace. If you don’t make a concerted effort to bring people with a wider range of genders, sexual orientations, abilities, and ethnicities into your workforce and then make the newcomers feel welcome and valued, they will eventually damage their company’s reputation and bottom line by losing talent and customers.
This PoV explores the broader socioeconomic changes turning D&I into a necessity for enterprise managers and executives, what you stand to gain from genuine D&I drives, common mistakes enterprises make on the D&I front and how to mitigate them, and what’s at stake if you continue to only pay lip service to promote previously marginalized groups in the workplace.
The new world order is here—and many business decision makers seem to be asleep at the wheel
No enterprise operates in a social vacuum. The world is experiencing tectonic shifts in relationships, attitudes, and standards. Enterprises must be aware of these shifts, stay ahead of them, and adapt. The shifts include:
D&I isn’t just the right thing to do—it’s also eminently sound business sense
Moral arguments for getting more women or people with disabilities into the workforce won’t sway many enterprises—unless they are run by individuals from marginalized groups. For those enterprises still not convinced, there are persuasive economic arguments to consider instead.
Enterprises aren’t pulling their weight on the D&I front
The examples of companies saying one thing in public in the fight to seem socially relevant but undermining themselves in practice are rife. This duplicity isn’t always conscious malice, and more often than not it is simply a generational ditch that’s hard to climb out of. Many managers and executives likely aren’t even aware of how they’re damaging their businesses with their casual prejudices. Some damaging actions and attitudes include:
D&I should be common sense, but it isn’t, so here are our tips for what you can do differently
We understand that it’s hard to stop being a relic of the past. For those interested in creating a genuinely better future for their employees and their business, here are some tips on driving real diversity and inclusion.
The Bottom Line: Diversity and inclusion are of paramount importance to the people you want to hire and sell to—if you dismiss their values, they’ll dismiss you.
The logic is astoundingly simple. Enterprises only exist because of their employees and customers. Until recently, the alignment between enterprises’ and the public’s values have been generally close. Now, that alignment is largely gone. Things that the corporate world dismisses as utopian are of paramount importance to both future employees and consumers. If enterprises cannot—or are not willing to—refashion themselves in the new moral mold society demands, the consumer will win and buy from enterprises that do. It’s up to today’s managers and executives to decide what’s more important for them—holding onto a wrongly idealized past and undeserved privilege, or securing the continued existence of their business.
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