8 ways to tackle disability inclusion the RIGHT way
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Diversity and Inclusion at Work
Over 20% of the world’s population is recognised as having a disability and with those as just the official figures disability is fast becoming an aspect of diversity that employers and businesses cannot ignore . How you can make sure that you’re an attractive proposition for those with a disability and that you’re able to understand how to track, measure and improve your strategies as you go?
Founder of Purple Consulting, a disability inclusion consultancy based in Singapore, Charlotte Faul gives her expert take on best practices in this space.
This article provides recommendations for developing outcome measures to assess the impact of workplace disability inclusion strategies, as part of your overall DEI plans.
The article provides insight on:
?
At Purple Consulting, our approach to disability inclusion strategy and execution ensures you can answer two questions:
and
We do this by working with businesses to measure outcomes.?
What are outcome metrics?
Outcome metrics measure the impact a disability inclusion initiative has on people with disabilities. In other words, it measures the data that matters.?
McKinsey and Company estimate that in the USA alone, $10.6 billion is spent annually on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion initiatives?[1]. That’s a huge spend; it makes sense to want to measure whether the investment is having any impact.?
At Purple Consulting, we distinguish between outcome measures, and output measures.
Both have a place in measuring disability inclusion programmes and we explain the difference between the two below.?
Note: The concept of using outcome measures should be applied across all DEI strategies, including but not limited to gender, race, ethnicity, LGBTQ+ strategies, as well as those with an intersectional lens. For the purpose of this article, we focus on disability.
How do outputs and outcomes differ?
Understanding the difference between output measures and outcomes is essential to effectively evaluate the impact of a disability inclusion program.
Output?measures demonstrate?what?was delivered.
For example, let's say you deliver Global Disability Inclusion Training for all leaders. Once the training is rolled out, your output might be something like:
We delivered 20 disability inclusion training workshops, 80% of leaders attended and 80% of leaders rated the training as excellent.
This tells you?what?you delivered.
Outcomes?on the other hand, measure the?impact?of what was delivered.
When applying this to disability inclusion programmes, we consider outcomes to be measures that show the impact the disability programme had on disabled employees.
For example, you might measure the following outcomes:
Disability outcomes may be related to equitable employment and promotion, pay parity with non-disabled employees, the absence of discrimination at work, and feelings of inclusion in the workplace. It’s the stuff that matters to disabled employees.?
Why are disability inclusion outcomes important?
By measuring disability outcomes, you not only determine the effectiveness of your DEI strategy, but also promote strategic alignment in executing disability initiatives. If everyone in your company knows what you want to achieve, it gives a sense of collective purpose and vision behind all initiatives. This way you minimize time wasted on initiatives that don’t align and won’t have any long-term impact.
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Clear outcome measures also enable a process of iteration - so you can assess whether or not you have achieved the outcome and adjust future disability strategy efforts accordingly.?
Need help tracking and measuring disability? Diversely tracks across eight elements of diversity, including disability, and we can help you reach your goals. Find out more about how we can support you.
Eight examples of disability outcomes.?
Outcomes should be specific, measurable, and targeted to your biggest opportunities for driving disability equity and inclusion. Here are the top outcomes to consider measuring:
1. Employee engagement and feelings of trust:?
2. Promotion rates:?
3. Retention rates:?
4. Pay equity:
5.?Physical and digital accessibility:?
6.?Accommodations:
7.?Workplace discrimination cases:?
8.?Diversity of workforce: disabled employee representation.?
A comment of caution on seeking to?only?achieve a workforce diversity target. This outcome is purposefully listed last. A workforce diversity target, such as ‘we aim to achieve 20% of our employees identifying as having a disability by 2026’ doesn’t tell you whether you have tackled systemic equity and inclusion challenges for people with disabilities.?
Programmes focused solely on achieving diversity targets are likely to be insufficient in addressing systemic equity and inclusion challenges faced by people with disabilities,
You can do more damage long term by increasing representation without addressing workplace barriers and systemic inequity.
Bringing an Intersectional DEI lens
For each of these outcomes, reviewing the data from an additional intersectional lens would give you a fuller and more complete picture of inequity. For example, how do pay, promotion and retention rates compare between black female disabled employees and white male disabled employees??
Conclusion?
Choosing disability outcomes prior to initiating a disability strategy and based on your company's individual needs analysis, not only ensures you make meaningful systemic change for your disabled employees, but also ensures you can efficiently measure progress and invest your DEI budgets efficiently. There are a number of disability outcomes to choose from - many of which are 'equity' and 'inclusion' measures, which are crucial for building workplace environments where your current and future disabled colleagues can thrive.
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1 年Huge support for this - so much to learn from these approaches to keep your hiring inclusive AND effective!