An effective diversity, equity and inclusion strategy should be a mainstay — a fundamental pillar of business as usual — for any organization looking to unlock the promise that we know difference brings
Combatting this stagnation is not easy. Change of any kind is almost invariably challenging. But it is almost always necessary. Diversity and inclusion are not just the right thing to do morally, they are the right thing to do for business. An effective diversity, equity and inclusion strategy should be a mainstay — a fundamental pillar of business as usual — for any organization looking to unlock the promise that we know difference brings.
Empowering diversity and enacting inclusion requires leaders to articulate a vision and keep that vision front of mind. It means overcoming inertia and resistance from those discomfited by change. It involves putting into place the systems and structures, the accountability measures, and the metrics to ensure that talented people thrive and advance unencumbered by obstacles, systemic biases or discriminatory policies.
It is about creating the scaffolding and the support to do the difficult and often tiring work ahead. And it means not only welcoming but normalizing difference across organizations and their ecosystems.
[This article has been reproduced with permission from University Of Virginia's Darden School Of Business. This piece originally appeared on Darden Ideas to Action.]