5 Actions Your Business Can Take to Foster Inclusion
As a business owner, creating an inclusive workplace that fosters equity, diversity and belonging can seem daunting. However, building a welcoming and supportive environment for all employees is key to attracting and retaining diverse talent and driving long-term growth.
In this blog, we’ll provide 5 practical steps to help you build an inclusive workplace where everyone feels valued, respected, and supported.
These 5 steps include:
Involve all employees in inclusion
First of all, it’s crucial to recognise that promoting inclusion in the workplace is a collective responsibility and not solely confined to business owners or managers. It is vital that every employee understands their role in building an inclusive workplace. This can be achieved by setting clear standards of behaviour for inclusion and treating all colleagues with respect and dignity. You can make inclusion more relevant to people at all levels of your organisation by helping employees understand how they can contribute to building an inclusive workplace.
Here are 5 examples of how your employees could contribute to building a more inclusive workplace:
By proactively involving all employees in the process of building an inclusive workplace, you can foster a culture of mutual respect, support, and appreciation where everyone feels valued. A 2020 report by McKinsey & Co, highlights that such an inclusive culture not only benefits employees but also drives business success in the long run.
Develop your managers’ capabilities for inclusion in the workplace
Managers play a critical role in creating an inclusive work culture; however, today’s managers bear the brunt of many recent changes in the workplace – managing and supporting colleagues when levels of attrition and burnout are high, facilitating a transition to the hybrid workplace, and more.
According to the Chartered Management Institute, for managers to become invested in equity, diversity, and inclusion, they need to be fully engaged at the onset of conversations. Like frontline workers, managers can benefit from additional support as their actions have a significant impact on employees’ experiences and opportunities at work which can make or break your equity, diversity, and inclusion strategy. For example, unconscious biases can often get in the way and lead to unequal treatment of individuals.
To address this, it’s important to review hiring and promotion data to ensure fairness and identify any biases. In addition, the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development recommends that embedding inclusion in managers’ training and development is crucial and can help raise awareness of issues related to inclusion, such as building and leading diverse teams, identifying and challenging unconscious bias, and fostering a culture of inclusion that celebrates diversity and respects differences.
By investing in the development of your managers’ capabilities, you can build an inclusive workplace that values and leverages diversity to drive business success and fosters an environment where everyone can thrive.
Create and regularly evaluate your policies and practices
As a business leader, you can create a welcoming and respectful workplace for all employees by implementing policies that promote equality, diversity, and inclusion.
Here are some guidelines you can follow:
By following these guidelines, you can create a positive workplace culture that values and respects all employees and ultimately protects and benefits your business. It is very important to review your employment practices and procedures regularly to ensure fairness and update them and your policy to reflect changes in the law.
Create a positive organisational culture: goals, values, and skills
To achieve sustainable business growth, it is essential to prioritise the wellbeing of your employees by ensuring they feel fully supported, satisfied with their workplace, and fairly compensated. Building a strong organisational culture is a foundational step in fostering engagement, commitment, and a sense of belonging among your team members. Creating a positive work environment requires focusing on elements such as dependability, structure, clarity, meaning, and impact.
Here are some practical steps you can take to build a healthy and positive culture:
Building an inclusive workplace takes time and effort, but it’s a worthwhile endeavour that can benefit your business in many ways. By focusing on these goals, values, and skills, you can foster a more inclusive and supportive work environment that encourages engagement, commitment, and a sense of belonging among all team members while promoting inclusivity and trust.
Measure progress with data-driven plans
According to a 2021 report by McKinsey & Co, true inclusion cannot be achieved through slogans, policies, training, fancy marketing, or communication campaigns alone. It requires a fundamental shift in how employees and leaders interact with each other, as well as the design of supportive organisational systems that actively encourage employees to leverage them.
To ensure the success of your inclusion efforts, it’s important to establish data-driven plans and regularly measure progress. This means conducting a full audit of your people processes, from recruitment and hiring to development and retention, and identifying any shortcomings or discrepancies around inclusiveness. By coupling this data with engagement and workforce survey data, you can gain a full measure of your workplace climate and identify areas for improvement.
With this information in hand, you can then establish rigorous inclusion strategies with clear goals and metrics. By measuring the results of your efforts, you can track progress and make data-driven decisions about how to adjust your strategies to achieve the best outcomes.
Finally, it’s important to establish a clear business case for how a more inclusive culture will benefit your company. This includes quantifying your inclusion goals and understanding how they will impact your mission, brand, and bottom line. By doing so, you can make a compelling case for investing in inclusion and ensure that your efforts are aligned with your overall business strategy.
If you need more guidance on implementing high-performance work practices in your small business or have questions about fostering inclusion in the workplace, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us. Our expert HR team is always happy to help you.