Companies are increasingly feeling pressure to respond to social movements on inequality, but far too many tend to respond reactively — making a donation or social media statement — instead of taking proactive measures to build equity and inclusion in their own organizations. The author offers four proactive actions to take: 1) Invest in “safety net” resources, 2) codify and operationalize your organization’s mission and values into a DEI strategy, 3) pursue internal and external initiatives that align with your mission and values, and 4) act consistently.
1. Invest in a “safety net.”
“Safety net” resources and protections support members of the organization from the worst ramifications of social inequity, without requiring the organization to take a public political stance to execute and are often framed as neutral resources available to all rather than only accessible by a specific group. Examples of safety net resources to consider offering and investing in include:
- Funding travel for necessary healthcare procedures not offered locally
- Ensuring consistent levels of accessibility, inclusion, and fair treatment in all physical offices around the world, even where local regulations do not mandate it
- Creating well-resourced and regular community-building efforts with your workforce
- Offering expansive employee benefits like remote work, flex time, parental leave, and Employee Assistance Programs, and designing an inclusive, culturally competent, and trauma-informed healthcare plan that supports a wide range of communities and identities
In the absence of these resources, social inequities inside and outside the company may disproportionately harm members of marginalized communities. However, the presence of these resources provides tangible benefits to all your employees, regardless of identity. Importantly, the rollout of these resources can increase employee engagement and trust in leadership, both important prerequisites to more substantial initiatives.
2. Codify and operationalize your organization’s mission and values into a DEI strategy.
The output and outcome of this process, beyond a feel-good statement that will live on a wall or a website, is a shared understanding of internal and external outcomes the organization is invested in achieving and how it plans to achieve them. When a mission and values are effectively operationalized into a compelling DEI strategy, they serve as a set of “moral guidelines” that enable internal- and external-facing actions taken in their name to be consistent and congruous and to appear so to stakeholders.The process of creating a DEI strategy should involve a wide range of stakeholder groups, including employees, customers, business partners, vendors, and local communities. These groups should be surveyed to understand their perception of the organization’s identity, what issues they want the organization to weigh in on, and what outcomes they want the organization to achieve. Leaders can then refine these insights into a concise set of organizational priorities and guidelines for their actualization.Many organizations prematurely celebrate after creating these guiding documents, but their usefulness comes primarily in how they impact decision-making processes and organizational culture for all leaders and employees. To ensure that the effort put into their creation pays off, leaders should follow through by training all decision-makers on how to apply these guidelines in practice and ensure that all aspects of the employee experience align with the mission, values, and strategy.
3. Pursue internal and external initiatives that align with your mission and values.
The most critical test of a DEI strategy is in its ability to turn what would in isolation be a nebulous or abstract value into effective decision-making at scale.A value of “empowerment” might be operationalized into a strategy of “supporting stakeholder autonomy.” Internally, this might look like supporting employee agency over their own work and workflow with a generous remote and flexible work policy, training all managers to evaluate results rather than hours worked, and equipping all leaders with inclusive leadership practices to create psychologically safe working environments. Externally, this might look like supporting constituents’ ability to make decisions for themselves and investing in community resources, information literacy, K-12 education, and access to healthcare, especially for underserved populations.A value of “connection” might be operationalized into a strategy of “cross-group learning and collaboration.” Internally, this might look like normalizing regular cross-department contact and co-working, ensuring that leaders of all Employee Resource Groups (ERGs) regularly meet to discuss their communities’ needs, updates, and initiatives, and creating a rotating mentorship program where junior employees can build relationships with senior leadership. Externally, this might look like connecting customers to local advocacy and community organizations, lobbying against legislation that drives wedges between communities, and divesting from partners and vendors that support hate groups.
4. Act consistently.
Understand that no organization can or should weigh in on every issue. So long as your organization is consistent in the types of issues it gets involved with, consistently sets and meets expectations with stakeholders on how it gets involved when it does, and builds mechanisms to periodically course-correct, it has a greater chance of creating social impact without incurring social controversy or perpetuating harm.Stakeholder groups play a large role in ensuring accountability. Consider creating compensated advisory boards and cross-functional groups that convene HR, Communications, ERG, DEI, and legal professionals, as well as executives, whose role it is to weigh in on breaking news and social developments as they happen. Create a decision-making process to ensure that your organization is able to respond in a timely and disciplined manner, rather than needing to scramble reactively every time an emergency occurs.Every six months to a year, consider at least a cursory engagement with customer focus groups and employees to stay on top of stakeholder needs and sentiment. Keep track of responses to internal and external advocacy efforts, especially when your actions miss the mark, and use that information to continually refine your social impact strategy. . . . Many of the leaders I talk to are nervous about taking action on social issues. They see the consequences for failure — being excoriated on social media; pundits calling their actions “performative”; being criticized for their workforce for initiatives that weren’t cheap or easy to undertake to begin with — and may wonder if doing nothing is “safer” than trying and failing. But while the old playbook is now outdated, stakeholders now are clear about what they want: consistency, bravery, and a willingness to take a stance on social issues even at the expense of short-term profit. Effective leaders who embrace these new expectations and act effectively will see their efforts pay off.







