Building on the Promise of Diversity
eBook - ePub

Building on the Promise of Diversity

How We Can Move to the Next Level in Our Workplaces, Our Communities, and Our Society

  1. 256 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Building on the Promise of Diversity

How We Can Move to the Next Level in Our Workplaces, Our Communities, and Our Society

About this book

This book is an impassioned wake-up call to bring diversity management to a new level -- beyond finger-pointing and well-meaning “initiatives”, and toward the shared goal of building robust organizations and thriving communities.

Leading diversity expert R. Roosevelt Thomas, Jr. has has continually raised the bar on how we think and act on a complex array of diversity issues and states that despite good intentions and hard work, most organizations are stuck in their diversity efforts. In our communities and our workplaces, a feeling of frustration has emerged as the promise of the Civil Rights Movement and affirmative action has become overly politicized and polarizing. Managing diversity is not a new issue, however, it is both a hallmark and core challenge that organizations and society have confronted since the founding of America, "an experiment in diversity."

This original, thoughtful, yet action-oriented book will help leaders in any setting -- business, religious, educational, governmental, community groups, and more -- break out of the status quo and reinvigorate the can-do spirit of making things better. The book includes a deeply felt analysis of the tangled intersections between diversity management, the Civil Rights Movement, and affirmative action agendas…and a roadmap for mastering the powerful craft of Strategic Diversity Management™, a structured process that helps you:

  • Realize why multiple activities and good intentions are not enough for achieving sustainable progress.
  • Recast the meaning of diversity as more than just race and gender, but as any set of differences, similarities, and tensions.
  • Accept that a realistic goal is not to eliminate diversity tension but to use it as a catalyst to address key issues.
  • Recognize diversity mixtures, analyze them accurately, and make quality decisions amid differences, similarities, and tensions.
  • Build an essential set of diversity skills and develop your “diversity maturity” -- the wisdom, judgment, and experience to use those skills effectively.
  • Reflect on the ways you might be “diversity challenged” yourself.

Whether you let diversity be a drain on your organization or a dynamic contributor to your mission, vision, and strategy is both a choice and a challenge. Building on the Promise of Diversity gives you the insights and skills you need to navigate through simmering tensions -- and find creative solutions for achieving cohesiveness, connectedness, and common goals.

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Information

PART ONE

INTRODUCTION

1

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CHAPTER

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DIVERSITY

IN SEARCH OF THE NEXT LEVEL

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ACROSS AMERICA these days, leaders of all types of organizations are voicing disillusionment about the current state of diversity. It is an enormous topic, with enormous consequences.
While typically we tend to think of diversity as being a concern of the business world, this state of anxiety is not limited to corporate CEOs. Leaders of other organizations—religious, educational, governmental, and social action groups—express the same misgivings.
“I’m concerned that we have plateaued” is a common sentiment. “Where do we go from here?” they ask. “We’ve got to raise diversity a notch if it’s to meet today’s challenges.” Even though they articulate their concerns in different ways, intuitively these leaders are all searching for the same thing—a way to move to the next level.
Talking with them brings to mind the refrain from an old Peggy Lee hit. “Is that all there is,” she sings in a world-weary voice as great expectations go unfulfilled. Indeed, weary is how many of us feel. What happened, they wonder, to the original promise? They yearn for a lasting solution to the equal-representation conundrum so that they can focus on other areas.
Evidence of both weariness and yearning abound. Corporate leaders gear up for the latest diversity effort, imploring their organizations to “do something different, so we don’t have to do it again.” Leaders in all sectors debate the “right wordings,” as if semantics were the bridge to the next level. Diversity? Inclusion? Multiculturalism? Cultural competency? Attendance at “best practices” conferences is brisk as organizations search for the panacea that will catapult them to the next diversity level. Community leaders fret about potential Balkanization.
Underlying all of this sentiment is an unspoken fear: “What if there is no next level? What if this is as good as it gets?” I don’t think it is. But an old folk saying comes to mind: Nothing changes if nothing changes. If we’re unwilling to change what has gone wrong, this may indeed be as good as it gets.

THE POLITICIZING OF DIVERSITY

Currently, most organizational leaders, along with the broader society in the United States, subscribe to a politicized definition of diversity—namely, that it is a code word for affirmative action. In that coded sense, diversity means fostering the recruitment, promotion, and retention of members of “protected classes.” The hope is that using the term diversity will avoid the stigma that has traditionally been attached to affirmative action.
“I believe in diversity.”
“I respect diversity.”
“We promote diversity.”
“Diversity is good for business.”
Statements such as these, so familiar in the business world, are tip-offs to this approach. They suggest that diversity is something that must be created or sanctioned. Yet diversity, per se, disentangled from its politicized definition, need not be approved of or promoted. It already exists. It simply is.
Whenever I describe myself as active in the diversity arena, I inevitably have to explain that diversity is not synonymous with affirmative action and equal opportunity. And yet, wherever I turn, I see evidence of the tightness of the affirmative action/diversity knot. When I make presentations based on my understanding of diversity, someone always comes up afterward and says, “That was not what I expected.” Many people come prepared to hear me discuss “diversity” as a euphemism for affirmative action.
A content analysis of “best diversity practices” supports my personal experience. Factors related to “the numbers” or “the representation of minorities and women” are often cited as the rationale for diversity efforts. In Diversity Inc.’s 2004 listing of the qualities of the Top 50 Companies for Diversity, for example, four of the six most frequently mentioned factors concerned the representation of minorities and women (see Figure 1-1). In Fortune magazine’s 50 Best Companies for Minorities, the five most frequently cited rationales also deal with representation (see Figure 1-2).
Implications
I believe that the predominant use of the term diversity as a euphemism for affirmative action has significant negative consequences. Affirmative action is the subject of considerable controversy and debate. To equate the terms is to tarnish diversity’s credibility with those who discredit affirmative action.
It is also to assume that the word diversity has no substance of its own. This assumption is doubly harmful. It hamstrings our ability even to identify diversity in its broadest sense—as something that exists beyond the workplace—and to develop appropriate processes for its management; it also inhibits our ability to recognize that such identification and processes are needed. This is not a question of altruism, but rather business necessity. Corporate leaders in particular would do well to turn their attention to identifying and addressing diversity outside of the workforce (more about this subject in Chapters 7 and 8), simply because it can produce considerable financial rewards.
Perhaps most destructive, however, is that politicizing any issue turns it into a power struggle. One side must win; the other must lose. By politicizing diversity, we have hindered greatly our ability to work creatively and flexibly to develop techniques that complement the traditional affirmative action framework. Those who discredit affirmative action feel validated; those who want to promote it feel frustrated.
FIGURE 1-1
Diversity Inc.’s qualities of the Top 50 Companies for Diversity.*
Item
Frequency
Recruitment and retention
22
Constant attention to diversity numbers/metric measures
17
Diversity education, training, and programs
16
Community involvement/philanthropy
16
Supplier diversity
15
Women hired and promoted to higher-level positions
14
Involvement, support, and leadership from CEO/president
10
Rewards, bonuses, or monetary incentives for diversity
8
Mentoring programs
8
Multicultural marketing
7
People of color hired and promoted to higher-level positions
6
Support from managers and senior executives
5
Partnerships with outside organizations
5
Communication between upper-level/lower-level/community/vendors/consumers
4
Emphasis on the individual
3
Hiring of interns of color
2
Hiring of people with disabilities
1
Total
159
SOURCE: This figure was developed from data presented in “Top 50 Companies for Diversity,” Diversity, Inc. (June–July 2004), pp. 46–110.
*Frequency r...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Dedication
  4. Contents
  5. Preface
  6. Acknowledgments
  7. Part One Introduction
  8. Part Two Context
  9. Part Three The Craft of Strategic Diversity Management
  10. Part Four The Journey Continues
  11. Appendices Mastering The Basics: A Critical Step Toward Diversity Maturity—Your Personal Coach
  12. Notes
  13. Selected Bibliography
  14. Index
  15. About the Author
  16. Copyright