Angie: What's in the air right now in DEI&B? What’s bubbling up in the DEI&B education community and the wider conversation about women going back to work?
Karen: It’s how we re-engage women, or what the engagement of women in the workforce is going to look like moving forward. And I have to say, the reality is that we're never going to fully go back to the way we were before COVID-19 hit. It caused people to self-reflect about what would be meaningful to them when it comes to work. It caused people to become intolerant to mistreatment. We must ensure that we do not try to bring people back to into the traditional forms of work, which clearly weren’t serving women. And for women of color, on top of the intolerance for the style of work, there is intolerance to not going back to how we were treated prior to the pandemic.
The workplaces that are going to become more appealing are those that do create a sense of belonging and are values-based.
As we talk about our approach and what we can do for our partner companies, we can help you through leadership development, as well as through understanding more about inclusion and getting those values in place. Building a principle-centered workplace creates high engagement.
Angie: Absolutely. Anything else that just jumps to mind that’s a growing trend?
Karen: I can tell you, the biggest thing from talking to other DEI and our practitioners is what I see as a healthy restlessness and a healthy impatience...So the glacial pace of change must accelerate. We have to have equity and inclusion...We're hearing from employees that it’s time to make equity happen, or that employees have options outside of the corporate sector. They’re more willing than ever to just go start their own company or do something else if they can't be fulfilled inside their organization.
My prediction is that those organizations who don't evolve over time to meet their employees needs and deliver equity will see themselves with less and less employee engagement - and failure, honestly.