Pocket Change: When inclusion is inconvenient

Pocket Change is a monthly series of notes on disruption, authored by 18 Coffees co-founder Caleb Gardner. Be the first to read Pocket Change — subscribe to the email newsletter here.

Some sectors of the U.S. economy have been shedding jobs the past few months, as fears of a recession give companies, especially in tech, a reason to tighten their belts and lay off thousands of workers. On the surface, these decisions have been made in the name of efficiency (something Wall Street investors love to hear) — despite the fact that the research shows that layoffs are almost always counterproductive in the long run.

Chief Diversity Officers and those with roles dedicated to DEI have been hit particularly hard, with attrition rates almost double non-DEI roles. Which begs the question: at what point will investing in diversity and inclusion be seen as part of a minimally viable organization?

Part of the problem is that leaders are still keeping DEI at arms length. Any department relegated to a cost center, outside of essential business operations, will be a target when times get tough. Too few organizations have figured out how to successfully integrate learning about inclusion, much less started to make it the responsibility of everyone in the organization.

Last weekend, I attended a private dinner at SXSW for social impact business leaders, and there was consensus that despite the structural challenges DEI leaders still face, the incentives are starting to slowly shift. Financial reporting, for example, will have to show more sophistication around how it considers diversity initiatives when measuring progress on the “S” (social) part of ESG. I came away from the conversation hopeful that we may be in the last gasps of DEI as a side project.

In the meantime, employees themselves have agency to make sure inclusion is still central to business operations. In fact, I’d say we all have a responsibility to be inclusive in our everyday work, whether or not there’s an organizational leader with DEI in their title. We shouldn’t be caught in the ethically-dubious position of leaving marginalized people on the sidelines just because equity isn’t in our job description.

Speaking of equity, I’ve recently launched a new podcast with DEI thought leader Adriele Parker where we talk about issues in the news related to the social responsibility of business. Listen and subscribe to Leadersh*t wherever you get your podcasts.


Keeping an eye on:

Caleb Gardner

Managing Partner at 18 Coffees

Previous
Previous

Successful ESG Strategy and the Employee Impact

Next
Next

Four Tips for an International Workation