Five Trends Driving Workplace Diversity In 2015
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Posted By: Stacie Coulter on February 04, 2015 Often criticized in the past as well-intentioned but stagnant, corporate diversity departments at major organizations have never been so visible. With Google yesterday pledging a substantial sum to Code2040, a nonprofit fostering diversity in Technology, and several key players in Silicon Valley publishing their lackluster diversity data in 2014, those in charge of workforce mix are in the hot seat. This is a positive finding considering that in a Deloitte report last year covering key HR trends, Diversity/Inclusion was consistently reported as one of the least important issues on leaders’ minds compared to other HR matters. What’s more, a SHRM report confirmed that among the Fortune 1000, a full one-fifth of respondents indicated their organizations have very informal diversity efforts with nothing structured at all, with 41% of study respondents specifying the underlying reason being that they’re “too busy” As a diversity consultant, a record number of corporate clients are either reviving and rebuilding their diversity programs—or launching them from scratch. The good news is that any organization on the path to improving their inclusivity can take a page from workplaces that are leading the charge in reframing diversity efforts, as the trends below highlight:
Perhaps most exciting, top workplaces are approaching diversity problems with a more forthright, open tone. A long recognized best place to work, PricewaterhouseCoopers’ diversity division is led by Maria Castañón Moats who proclaims on their company webpage, “At PwC, we believe in confronting the hard realities—and then doing something about it.” Then there’s a Clorox corporate blog post which aptly rationalizes, “…If you cannot answer the diversity question clearly and favorably when it is asked in the recruiting process, young people are going to choose to work elsewhere.” These examples represent a more resolute stance compared to the old days of corporations simply valuing difference or promoting a tolerant environment. What diversity trends are you seeing take root? What trends do you expect will stay the course? Selena Rezvani is a diversity consultant, women’s leadership speaker, and author of Pushback: How Smart Women Ask–and Stand Up–for What They Want. Connect with her at nextgenwomen.com and @SelenaRezvani on Twitter. If you enjoyed this article, Join DiversityRecruiting.com today for similar content and opportunities via email! |
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