Intro to DEI for your Association
What is DEI? Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) is vital to creating and maintaining a successful organization, one that is founded and rooted on the principles that all people within your association can thrive.
Workplace culture (also commonly referred to as organizational culture) is a blanket term for the accepted practices, morals, values and processes that guide how people interact at work. The predominant style of workplace culture can shift dramatically, especially in times of extreme change or upheaval. One good example is during World War II when women entered the workforce, but the most recent one is the Covid-19 pandemic. With deep and ongoing discussions that start with remote, hybrid and in-person work, associations are challenged in 2023 to examine their workplace culture and adapt.
Here’s what that means for you.
It’s clear that the culture of work has changed, and in the same breath so has how we actually define workplace culture. In the stereotypical office of the 1950s, smoking was permitted and cocktails at lunch were common. This was accepted practice and part of the culture — business was conducted during alcohol-fueled lunches (and naps may have been part of the afternoon schedule).
These days, business looks very different, and most organizations focus on four factors.
The global pandemic changed where we do business. Many offices shut down completely and never reopened a physical space, while others have mandated an in-person return at the risk of unemployment. Still, others are struggling to navigate the hybrid space between fully remote and completely in-person.
And the decision is complicated. Many employees found a better balance when they worked solely at home, while others couldn’t wait to get away and back to work where it was easier to focus.
While some businesses center in-person interactions as a cornerstone of their culture, there is a definite disconnect between the culture employees want (remote or hybrid options) and the emphasis on full-time, in-person work. Of the 10,000 people surveyed by The Future Forum, 44% of executives preferred in-person work, citing an energized and more connected feeling, but only 17% of employees agreed. Some employees believe some of this push for full-time work at the office is more about supervision and old-school ways of thinking, but executives insist it’s more about collaboration and teamwork.
If your organization is trying to figure out which is best, a 2022 study by Owl Labs found that remote and hybrid employees were 22% happier than fully onsite workers. And another survey of 1,000 workers conducted by Ergotron found that 56% of respondents felt their mental health was stronger in a hybrid environment.
Either way, in the great workplace culture shift of 2023, it’s clear the conversation has to start with where work gets done.
Once an organization decides where work gets done, how it gets done — the workflow or process — is next. With technology continuing to innovate and new generative AI tools taking all aspects of work by storm, systems are changing dramatically to support an elevated workplace culture.
Read more: Place, Process, DEI and Wellness: Workplace Culture in 2023No matter where people are working, it's critical to understand the work that needs to get done and what it requires. This is not a one-size-fits-all approach; rather, each business must decide what process produces optimal results (regardless of the way things have been done in the past).
Associations in particular have unique needs and priorities — they often serve a specific population with a laser-focused mission. It’s important to have processes in place that serve as a roadmap to that destination.
Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) are critical aspects of workplace culture. Making DEI a part of your association asks:
What is DEI? Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) is vital to creating and maintaining a successful organization, one that is founded and rooted on the principles that all people within your association can thrive.
It goes deeper than simply looking for diversity of race. A workplace with a culture of diversity, equity, and inclusion also includes diverse:
Diversity pays off. The most diverse workplaces experience 2.5 times the cash flow of monocultures and are able to capture 70% of new markets.
But while most companies understand that a diverse and inclusive workplace culture is better for the bottom line, movement is slow. In 2022, just six CEOs of Fortune 500 companies were Black, and 46% of employees said that discrimination remained an issue.
It’s a cultural shift in 2023 that can’t wait any longer.
Gone are the days of wellness as an individual responsibility, especially for the 34% of workers who spend 40 hours or more at work. While not every association is able to offer a Google-like suite of wellness benefits, a culture that supports employee wellness can be as simple as adding flexible hours for parents or paid time off for mental wellness and physical therapy.
Another critical aspect is recognizing that wellness is worth paying for. In addition to providing a comprehensive array of benefits as part of a workplace that values wellness, some companies are recognizing that financial incentives for taking advantage of them are important, too.
In a Deloitte 2023 Global Human Capital Trends survey, 87% of organizational leaders believed that workplace culture is very important.
The bad news? Of those leaders who wanted to focus more on changing the place and process of work, only 24% felt prepared to make changes.
It can be a long road, but there are 10 steps to get your business started on the path.
The relationship between employees and their work has changed, and it’s up to the workplace to learn, grow, and adapt. As we emerge more fully from the pandemic, the time for making substantive improvements to workplace culture is now.