Diversity. Inclusion. Engagement. These are the buzzwords du jour. Organizations big and small often go to great lengths to demonstrate their “open arms” cultures. You’ve seen the colorful cast of characters on the company brochure or website. A nice mix of gender and race and some even throw in a guy in a wheelchair for good measure. And there are scores of studies to show that diversity boosts innovation, engagement, productivity, and organizational success.
For example, Sodexo boasts that ‘gender balance is our business’, and their mission is to make it everyone else’s business too. 40% of all staff members in Sodexo are women, and 43% of the members on the board of directors are female. According to 2018 statistics, they maintain that optimal gender balance increased employee engagement by 4%, gross profit by 23% and brand image by 5%. They also show no sign of stopping on their mission to optimize gender-balance, vowing that by 2025, 40% of their workforce will be made up of women.
Consider how Kaiser Permanente has described their commitment to diversity:
“As the largest managed care organization in the USA, the Kaiser Permanente workforce reflects no racial majority, with nearly 60% of the staff comprising of people of color. Additionally, three-quarters of all employees, nearly half of the executive team, and more than one-third of their physicians are women. Part of the diversity agenda is to provide culturally-acceptable medical care and culturally-appropriate services to all of the 140 cultures currently represented in the population of the US.”
Full disclosure: I’m a woman and I’m pleased at the commitment these organizations are making to level the opportunities for women. However, whether you identify as a member of the majority or the minority, isn’t it a stereotype in and of itself to assume that your contributions will be more or less valuable based upon human anatomy below the neck or skin color? Doesn’t this completely fail to address what we’re trying to accomplish in the first place: diversity of thought?
In these two examples, while at first glance seem noble, the irony of broad stereotypes within their definition of diversity is glaring. By focusing on race and gender, the assumption is that people who look different from me must think different from me and those who look like me must think like me. The very definition of a stereotype is “a widely held but fixed and oversimplified image or idea of a particular type of person or thing.”
Diversity is being invited to the party; inclusion is being asked to dance.
– VERNA MYERS
In 2014, Joe Duarte and his research team found that a group of liberal social psychologists explicitly admitted they would discriminate against those who do not share their beliefs. When surveyed about their self-assessed probability of voting either for or against a known conservative job applicant (when both alternatives are equally qualified for the job), about 82% indicated they would be at least a little more likely to vote against the conservative hire, with about 43% indicating a fairly high degree of certainty they would (above the midpoint of the scale).
Compare that with some other explicit racist tendencies, if 82% of respondents said they would vote against a black hire or a female hire, I suspect there would be some outrage. But what if the hypothetical hire were a Muslim or an atheist and the organization was located in the Bible Belt? What if the HR director is staunchly pro-choice, and he learned from a potential hire’s Facebook page that she was a staunch pro-life evangelical Christian? What if the potential hire is a proud gun rights activist and the interviewer’s daughter was killed in a school shooting?
These are all classic examples of confirmation bias: when it comes to questions of subjective belief, we search out evidence to confirm that which we believe to be true and aligns with our general world view. When there is dissonance between our vision of how things should be, we look for reasons for that dissonance – often in the form of flaws in others’ thinking. And flaws in thinking inevitably spill over into flaws in character.
The construct that our world views are shaped by culture, background, experiences, and personalities is core to the concept of diversity of thought. Organizations that bring people together with diverse perspectives on a wide range of things – i.e., how learn and communicate, where they find inspiration, the way they approach problems – can create conversations that stimulate creative disagreement and cultivate tolerance and open-mindedness. The problem is often that there is a conflict between standing out and fitting in, between voicing disagreement for the good of the team and jeopardizing social cohesion to the detriment of the team. “You don’t have to look like us” means little when “but you do have to think like us” is standard operating procedure.
Amazon requires diversity of thought over social cohesion. The thirteenth leadership principle at Amazon is:
“Have Backbone; Disagree and Commit: Leaders are obligated to respectfully challenge decisions when they disagree, even when doing so is uncomfortable or exhausting. Leaders have conviction and are tenacious. They do not compromise for the sake of social cohesion. Once a decision is determined, they commit wholly.”
Because the fundamental premise of diversity of thought rests on bringing together different ideas, it cultivates more ideas, better ideas, and guards against groupthink.
Does encouraging people push boundaries and challenge ideas happen without friction, effort, or conflict? Of course, not. It’s much easier to hire, promote, collaborate and even communicate with someone who shares your values and beliefs. But, without friction, effort, and conflict, growth isn’t possible. Criticizing someone simply for having a different opinion is as not much different from criticizing yourself for having different opinions 10 years ago. Growth isn’t just about challenging the views of others, it’s about challenging our own views and the existing systems and norms that support those views. In addition to growing intelligence, we must also learn how to grow intellectual humility.
Make one of your corporate values that you foster a culture of inclusion that values diversity of thought, empowers employees and inspires collaboration. A good first step is understanding the irrational judgments we often make because of subconscious implicit biases. Check out my whitepaper Cognitive Bias at Work in the Workplaceor contact me to discuss how I can bring a professional development session on cognitive biases to your organization.
Diversity: The art of thinking independently together.
– Malcom forbes