Building A Foundation Of Respect – Part 55

September 2, 2021 Blogs

Does your organization identify how inclusion will contribute to its well-being and profitability?

A successful inclusion plan will identify tangible goals that can be measured.

To create workplaces that are inclusive of Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour requires more than good intentions: they require tangible goals that can be measured. The goals identify how these efforts will contribute to the well-being and profitability of the organization. This ensures that the initiative remains a priority.

Without the ability to measure progress, even great ambitions cannot be realized. In a study of more than 600 people in 35 countries, researchers found that 70% of respondents said that creating an inclusive workplace is a strategic priority of their organization; however, only 43% of respondents said they are on track to achieve their goals.

A leading reason why many organizations fail to achieve their inclusion goals is that few are measuring their progress. In a study of Canadian employers, 79.6% said that inclusion, equity, and human rights are considered a strategic priority within their organizations. However, only 18.8% reported that they measure the impact, efficacy, or return on investment of their inclusion initiatives.

Researchers caution that effective measurement requires more than filling a certain number of positions with Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour. Measurements must always relate back to the strategies and key objectives of an organization.

The business case, or business plan, for inclusion answers why you should pursue a specific goal and establishes how to measure whether you have succeeded or not. To create an organization that is inclusive, tangible goals should be focused on the specific challenges of an organization, and be able to show the reversal of a trend that is of concern.

These are some of the areas related to inclusive workplaces that can affect profitability and can be measured:

The business case for creating an organization that is inclusive of Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour will identify how inclusion will contribute to its well-being and profitability.

Here is a list of questions that will help organizations identify potential areas of challenge.

1. Recruitment

2. Retention and advancement

3. Marketplace engagement

Measuring progress toward a more inclusive organization may require new approaches to gathering information and understanding the connection between inclusion and the well-being and profitability of an organization. However, the effort is well worth it. Research shows that when organizations commit to inclusion, they financially outperform competitors and increase engagement, productivity, and innovation.   

The BuildForce Respectful Workplace Online Toolkit provides three tools based on the proven practices of respectful and inclusive organizations to help address systemic racism: the Online Self-Assessment Tool, a Policy Framework and Implementation Guide, and the online course, “Working in a Respectful and Inclusive Workplace.”

The management Self-Assessment Tool provides a blueprint of the actions required to identify and re-work systems where unconscious bias may be impacting management goals to be fair and inclusive in their recruitment, promotion, and retention practices.

Also look for the new BuildForce online course, to be released in the fall of 2021, to help leaders and managers to understand systemic racism. BuildForce is also developing a new module for the “Working in a Respectful and Inclusive Workplace” course to help workers develop awareness about systemic racism, also to be released in 2021.

For more info:

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