Being Intentional When Creating a Culture of Inclusion

The well-regarded educator and author Peter Drucker is famously known for his quote:  “Culture eats strategy for breakfast.”  That concept is particularly true when it comes to inclusion and diversity where an organization’s way of thinking, behaving and working is paramount in creating a workplace where everyone feels like they belong.

What leaders say at every level, how they say it and then move to actualize it, and what appears on a company website are often very revealing about where an organization is on its inclusion journey. For this reason, organizations would do well to pay as much attention to the science – or the qualitative indicators — as well as the art, of creating their desired inclusion profiles.

Several key actions that can help create an inclusive culture include:

To be sure, these steps must be accompanied by the quantitative measures and tangible successes including diversity in recruitment, promotion and representation at the top. Adopting a strategy that focuses on measurement of diversity metrics, including the mix of diverse talent in the workplace and indicators of diversity such as employee surveys and engagement scores, is always an important part of the equation.

To establish a truly inclusive culture, organizations must be intentional, decisive and demonstrative in reflecting and modeling diversity across the organization, inexorably linking it to business imperatives. Companies that continue to take steps towards embracing and respecting the individual will, in turn, affirm a “great place to work and build a career” experience for everyone.

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