How “Privilege Blinkers” Damage Inclusivity In The Workplace
By Gemma Saunders 🌈 GAICD , Founder of Workplace Edit
Are you reading more headlines telling us who is mandating a full return to office mandates? Personally, to me it feels like leaders have dusted off a playbook from a century ago about unchecked privilege.
Head back to 1914 for example. In fact, during both world wars, women took on roles traditionally held by men, such as factory work and other essential services, due to the male workforce being deployed in military service. These periods demonstrated women's capability in a wide range of jobs, though many were expected to return to traditional roles after the wars ended.
So, when a dominant group determines they personally don't need the innovative solution, they start to roll it back. Ultimately limiting the number of people who benefit from it.
Is this another case of decisions by people who have “privilege blinkers” on—and are reverting backwards?
📙 Read the whole story via our Aquent Australia blog
What are “privilege blinkers”?
Many of us are wearing invisible blinkers that prevent us from seeing the whole world as it is—we only see our narrow portion of the world.
So, how might we better understand our invisible privilege and power blinkers?
Here are some examples:
Opportunity
Learn to see your own blinkers
Reflection Questions
Opportunity
See past them to obtain a more accurate view of other people’s realities.
Reflection Questions
Opportunity
Reduce shame and guilt and instead, leverage your privilege.
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Reflection Questions
Take the return-to-office mandate example. Research tells us for knowledge and wisdom workers (where work can be done from anywhere) that the preferred way of working is the purpose-based, hybrid model. This is where employers retain some mix of remote and in-person work. The hybrid model can offer some great benefits to both employees and employers if it’s carefully considered and executed however at the employee level. But, leaders are still creating confusion with the lack of purpose behind the model they are leading and embedding.
If you plan to make changes to where, when, and how people work, here are some key considerations that will help you remove these blinkers:
WTP: What’s the Purpose?
Just because something is trending, doesn't mean it’s right for you. Employees expect you to come up with a story that makes sense. Telling employees they have to do a minimum of 4 days in the office by talking about buzz words such as “maintaining in-person connection” or “adapting to changes in the market” isn't going to cut it.
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Are you striving for equality or equity?
If you are having a binary approach of 3 days in the office, you might think you are treating everyone the same however it might serve you better to consider being equitable rather than operating from a position of sameness.
What about part-timers? What about our non-office staff? People with disabilities? Transgender employees? A report by TotalJobs which surveyed over 400 transgender workers revealed that more than 31% of trans workers said they feel more confident doing their job from home. However, this improvement poses serious questions about the return to the workplace, and how it will affect the safety and mental health of trans people, especially as only 8% of trans workers believe their colleagues have been supportive during the pandemic.
If you haven't planned the impact this might have on your ability to attract and retain diverse talent, don't be surprised when you're left with a workforce of sameness.
From WTP to EVP (Employee Value Proposition)
If employers aren't able to explain the purpose and drivers behind their new workforce models, employees will move from wondering “What’s the purpose?” to “What’s the point?” and your attrition will become an issue. The talent market is not “soft” or “slow” it's mixed—check out research from Seek and other experts to inform your view. Don't fall into the trap of short-term thinking. Make sustainable, informed decisions that withstand movement in the talent market.
“Employers that can explain how their flexibility and ways of working models are based on trust and equity by design will stand out from the crowd.”
Best-fit flexible ways of working can be the jewel in the crown of the Employee Value Proposition (EVP) for those willing to spend time on “best-fit” over “back to normal” strategies.
Workplace Edit supports organisations in redesigning workplace experiences so they can genuinely work for more people. We work with bold leaders to find best-fit flexibility and ways of working models, shape Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (DEI) strategies and craft employee value propositions that deliver differentiated and equitable experiences.
An enemy of average, I'm a results-driven Marketing Director for Aquent Australia; living and working in Sydney | Warrane. Member of Aquent's Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Council.
1moI agree with Lisa. This guest post is so insightful Gemma Saunders 🌈 GAICD. Now that I really understand what privilege actually means, I found it even more valuable. I also love how you spell out what employees really want to know.
Recruitment Specialist | Digital UX/UI/Product, Digital and Graphic Design | Across Permanent, Contract, Freelance| I love connecting creative talent to their dream job! 🌟
1moSuch an incredible piece. Knowing your privilege is such an important step in becoming a true ally and embracing inclusion.