Uncovering Blind Spots: Outlook on Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging (DI&B) in Indian Workplaces (2022) shares 40% of employers do not have a formal policy or approach to DI&B and lack of leadership vision or using a one-size-fits-all approach is holding back organizations from being inclusive.
By 2030, 70% of workforce mix will comprise of Generation Z and millennials and 70% of them have said D&I as a key criterion while choosing an employer. Organizations will struggle to attract and retain people irrespective of their gender, race, caste, orientation, etc.
Given that LGBT+ people make 7-10% of any population, they are still a marginalized community and access to education, housing, jobs, pay parity, and leadership roles is a struggle. While the Pride month may be over, now is the time to look at all the touch points and ensure they are welcoming and inclusive.
Making all employee touch points inclusive and welcoming
Avni Chauhan
in her master’s thesis focused on “Career Development of LGB People” says, Employee engagement is summation of work environment + leadership + team and co-worker + training and career development + compensation + organizational policies + workplace wellbeing.
There is more to be done beyond turning your logos in rainbow colors and talking about policies on your website.
- Attracting LGBT+ talent - People who experience you brand must naturally become your ambassadors - Participate in diversity job fairs, provide internships and mentoring opportunities for LGBT+ candidates, be a part of/sponsor LGBT+ events in your community, make LGBT+ people your ambassadors, and invest CSR funds towards development and empowerment of LGBT+ community, join hands with customers and suppliers to build an inclusive supply chain/ecosystem
- Recruitment process – Make it fair, respectful, and equitable - Ensure you offer several diversity candidates (LGBT+ one of them) resumes for all roles, have a diverse/inclusive interview panel, and take feedback from candidates on what went well and what can be improved, ensure policies are shared along with offer letters and provide an opportunity to connect without out colleagues and allies,
- Onboarding process – Inclusive, explicit and showcase the end-to-end of employee life cycle - Ensure diverse candidates are a part of the onboarding process, explicitly showcase organizational efforts to create diversity, inclusion (ERGs), belonging (pride events), and equity including policies, etc., give a view of steps taken to ensure equity, talk about PoSH committee and redressal of grievances and ensure LGBT+ people have representation in PoSH committee, understand what more you can do to make it equitable (for ex: housing and transport for transgender colleagues) for marginalized community
- Learning and development - Strive to be an equitable opportunity employer and not just an equal opportunity employer. LGBT+ awareness and ally onboarding sessions for employees, training sessions for people managers, lived experience sharing internships opportunities technical, skill and leadership development programs for LGBT+ people
- Rewards, recognition, and benefits – It is key to driving behaviour change and sustaining an inclusive culture – study compensation of LGBT+ and ensure fair pay, reward bystanders for turning into allies, recognize vocal and visible allies, turn LGBT+ colleagues into role models
- Performance and progression – Sustainable inclusion is key - build diverse teams and make inclusion a key criterion for promotion; ensure there is adequate LGBT+ representation at various levels of management including corner offices and boards, offer mentoring opportunities for LGBT+ people, study career paths of LGBT+ people, launch surveys to get feedback from LGBT+ people
- Retain and exit – Measurement at exit – Use 3rd party surveys and exit interviews to ask if exclusion/lack of belongingness was a reason for exit; find out what needs to be improved and use inputs to recalibrate people, systems, and processes
Organizations must use the next 300 days to ensure every touch point is inclusive, musical, magical (keep heteronormativity/heterosexism in check), welcoming and equity at every step. Let's get started now...
Expert Guidance to Enhance Your Healthcare LGBTQ+ Patient-Centered Care | LGBTQ+ Consultant, Speaker Author, Indie ‘Book of the Year’ | Crain's LGBTQ+ Exec. Award | Loves Gardening, Travel, Helping Others
2yAnd coming out is it always safe…
Vice President - ED&I CoE, APAC Region | Talent Management, L&D, Recruitment, HR Technology
2yRecognizing and celebrating any of these important moments or dates should be just that - recognizing and reflecting, and not an expectation that people will come out following celebration and commitment to inclusion. The individual should have the agency to choose to come out or not, to whatever degree they are comfortable. Not on how large or vibrant or passionate the pride month celebrations were!
Strategic Global Business Partner | Doctoral Scholar in HR @ XLRI
2yI so agree with you that organisations need to go way beyond to really become an inclusive employer of choice. Remember watching my LinkedIn feed thro the month of June and wondering, seriously do people think giving cakes & balloons with pride colours, walking around on campus with flags, etc are going to make a difference to the LGBTQ+ community? One month of events once a year for what outcome? Yes insurance is a step in the right direction, but would say just a baby step. How many of them can say with pride that they support gender reaffirming surgeries or adoption by a same sex couple or counselling support to the employee and their families through the coming out transition? How many of them have interviewers who can treat a LGBTQ candidate with the same sense of respect as any other candidate. These are the sort of steps which can make LGBTQ+ employees believe that fellow employees understand their challenges in the real sense and the organisation is truly looking to bring them into the main stream fold. You don’t need to do sponsorship or events to proclaim your support for the community, simple measures in the right direction can speak louder than words any day. Organisations really need to look for more meaningful ways.
DEI Practitioner | Passion, Persistence, Patience
2yLovely ... Thanks Avni Singh (She/Her) for conducting articulating such a wonderful thesis and Thanks Chandra Duraiswamy (He/Him) for the post . The post is an assimilation of practical tips which can be easily incorporated in any organization . 🤗🤗🤗
Wonderful! These are so well articulated and practical tips!