This is how we do diversity at Culture Amp
Diversity and Inclusion (D&I) is so important to Culture Amp that it’s part of everything we do. We spent a great deal of time evaluating how to build out this function within Culture Amp. During our research, we spoke with people across the globe and learned two important things.
First, there is no universally proven strategy for success. We know that culture cannot simply be copied and pasted; the D&I function at Culture Amp would be unique in that it would be the face of D&I internally, but also externally to our 1,700 customers. The role would have to be customized to fit our unique culture, business objectives and global footprint.
Second, speaking to different people gave us diverse and valuable perspectives. A light bulb went off - the role should be filled with various voices. That’s how we made the decision to make the Head of D&I role a rotation for potential leaders. Anyone interested can apply for the opportunity to build their strategic muscle and learn new things in this role for 12 months. We’re now coming to the end of the first year, and I believe this approach has worked well for us.
Our first Head of D&I is Steven Huang. In his final interview for the role, he said something that I really loved. His objective for the year was for everybody at Culture Amp to be able to articulate why D&I was valuable to them. Rather than only reporting on diversity metrics, he felt that we should focus on taking our people on a journey, helping them understand what inclusion really means, and creating a space where they can speak up if they don't feel included. The thread that runs through all of the work that he’s done this year aligns with our first value of having the courage to be vulnerable. As Steven says, “It’s okay to say the wrong thing as long as you’re willing to listen to feedback. When people say they’re offended, feel ostracized or don’t feel included, we need to take that perspective on board.”
Over the past 9 months, Steven has focused on three things in particular:
1. Creating a pathway to inclusion
The first thing Steven has focused on is creating a pathway to inclusion and giving people the space to have uncomfortable conversations. He has achieved this by building programs that incorporate ideas about D&I into our work at both a strategic and tactical level. His work has helped us all see issues that we weren’t aware of.
Take recruitment as an example. Many people believe that unconscious bias training is best practice for hiring managers, but without context, this type of training can actually make differences more noticeable. Steven believes unconscious bias belongs in a portfolio of diversity management strategies that acknowledge that bias comes from somewhere - racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, and ableism.
While unconscious bias training is valuable, it assumes that we’re getting diverse candidates but our managers aren’t hiring them. But the truth of the matter is that we’re not seeing a truly diverse group of candidates because our company has not been attractive to those people. So, a lot Steven’s work in the D&I space is not just about helping employees and managers to confront and look past their biases. It’s also about engaging the whole company to work out how to open up our arms and become a place where diverse people want to come and work.
Steven has also created Diversity and Inclusion Simulations. This open-source program creates simulations to engage people in discussions around D&I. These are run at our own internal workshops and at public People Geek events. Company leaders get involved so that the audience can watch them go through the process and create an environment where all employees can voice their perspective. I’ll be involved in a simulation in Melbourne soon.
2. Hold ourselves to account with data
Through our D&I initiatives, we're now bringing data to bear and holding ourselves to account. A tactical way we’ve done this is in our calibration sessions, where we help managers decide how much people are paid. We do these sessions every 90 days so we can adjust levels and roles quickly.
After we’ve done the calibration, Steven and our Head of People run a series of analyses on our data and diversity splits across gender, job level, function, and location. For example, they look at whether we pay men more or less than women, or if women are promoted faster than men. This highlights if we have a systemic issue to fix or if there are any statistically meaningful differences that need to be explained, adjusted and communicated. We can then put our hand on our heart and say that we’re not under or overpaying any group of people.
In our most recent calibration, we found that women at Culture Amp are currently promoted on average every 14 months and men every 16 months. Statistically, that's not a big difference but it's important to monitor.
Rather than just focusing on diversity metrics, Steven has also used our own Diversity & Inclusion Survey. Initially, he has focused on whether we have an inclusive environment or not. We want to understand where exclusion might be happening and, collectively, design strategies to remove disparate employee experiences.
3. Connecting Culture Amp to the broader D&I community
I think the most important thing Steven has done this year is connecting Culture Amp to the external D&I community. We’re still early on in our D&I journey but we’re going on that journey with our eyes wide open. We’re not perfect and there are so many other people to learn from, so it’s been great that Steven has spent a lot of his time talking to other companies (check out 21 diversity and inclusion influencers to meet some of them). He’s shared notes and stories about what they’re doing and reflected on how we can use those ideas at Culture Amp.
He’s also shared what we’re learning and what we’re doing around D&I with others. While many are supportive of our innovations, we also receive a healthy dose of criticism. Being able to listen and understand the critics is a muscle every D&I function needs to develop.
I'm really happy with the approach that Steven has taken. The concept of this role is to train our attention and he’s certainly shone a light on areas of D&I that are important. Ever since we started Culture Amp as four white, 30-something IT males, paying down our diversity debt has been important to us. It’s great to see that journey has gone beyond the need to hire more women and is now a much more holistic, deeper and challenging conversation around what D&I actually means for our organization.
Didier Elzinga is a People Geek and CEO/Co-Founder of Culture Amp. You can follow Didier on Twitter and LinkedIn. This post was first published on the Culture Amp blog.
Connecting dots and solving company puzzles at Slalom Consulting.
6yFantastic. Also- I’ve learned a lot from Steven’s posts and appreciate his sharing the process outside the walls of Culture Amp.
People and Culture Executive | HR Strategy Design and Delivery | Ways of Working Transformation | Agile | HCD | Change
6yLisa Hobson
Building the world's leading independent spirits brand incubator & accelerator!
6ySuch an enlightened approach! While many are adopting knee-jerk reactions to the diversity issue, you guys have broken new ground, taken the lead on the discussion & turned it into a sustainable cultural advantage. Seriously impressive....
Marriage and Family therapist since 1995. Supporting adults and their families in finding their most harmonious roles, personally and professionally.
6y👌🏽
Emotional Intelligence | Speaker | Published Author | Workshop | Programs | amy@amyjacobson.com.au
6yGreat read Didier!! It’s so great to hear the approach to going to the core of the problem in a lot of D&I issues that the roles and companies aren’t attracting a diverse group of applicants to choose from. All in all what has been achieved in 12 months sounds fantastic!