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STRESS
MANAGEMENT
Signs
of Stress and Imbalance
How To Break
Through Fear in Turbulent Times
What is
Stress?
Solving
Problems in a High-Stress Environment
Break
Through Self-Doubt & Fear
Let's Get
Physical
Holiday Stress Hotspots
Make
2004 your Year of Organization
Holiday Stress Hotspots
Manage
Stress by Stopping Obsessive or Unwanted Thoughts
Meditate
Stress Away
Taking Stress for a Ride
3
Strategies to Reduce Stress
Cleaning Up
Stress; Control It, Change It or Let It Go!
Substance
Abuse
The Courage
to Feel Bad
The Challenge
of Change
Tips
for Managing Holiday Madness
Modern Day Stressors: What Stress Looks Like in the 21st Century
The Life Juggle: How to Find Lifework Balance
New Year's
Resolutions
CHANGE
The Questions Leaders Should Ask Themselves
about Change
The Top Ten Ways to Manage People through
Change
Understanding Change
The Challenge of Change
RUNNING A BUSINESS
Be Heard. Be Strong. Be Effective. How to Deliver Impressive Presentations
Getting Started in the Speaking Business: Answers to Burning Questions
What Entrepreneurs Need to Know to be Successful
How to Create and Maintain Culture as You Grow
Recruitment and
Retention of Diverse Candidates
DIVERSITY
A Passion for Diversity
Traits of a Diverse Organization
Simma's Holiday Diversity Q and
A
How to Go from Eggshell Walking
to Multicultural Festivity Making
Are You Wasting Your Money on
Diversity Training?
Interview Bias: Overcoming the
Silent Forces Working Against You
How to Help LGBT Employees Help
Your Organization Grow
How to Integrate Diversity Into
Your Business Strategy
Diversity Benefits Organizations
and Communities
Diversity Fast Facts
How to Integrate Diversity
10 PC Tips for Communicating
with a Diverse Audience
Are You Truly Successful?
Interviewing Employees Who Stay
Wage and Position Disparity
Across Gender
What Every Consultant Needs to
Know About Diversity Consulting and Training
Diversity Competency Assessment
Recruitment and Retention of Diverse Candidates
Understanding Diversity Dialogues
Dialogue as a Communication Tool Amongst Diverse Groups of People
Communicating across Generations in the Workplace
Simma & Kate's Strategies for Cross-Generational Relationship Building
Valuing Diversity during the Holidays
COMMUNICATION
Understanding Dialogue: A Q&A on
the benefits of dialogue
Dialogue as a Communication Tool
Communication with Concern
Helping Others Deal with Loss
10 PC Tips for Communicating
with a Diverse Audience
Tips for Better Communication
Between Men and Women in the Workplace
Understanding Diversity
Dialogues
Dialogue as a Communication Tool
Amongst Diverse Groups of People
Simma & Kate's Strategies for
Cross-Generational Relationship Building
Web Site Tips
GENDER
COMMUNICATION
Differences in Male and Female Communication Styles
Gender Communications Differences and Strategies
Wage and Position Disparity across Gender
Tips for Better Communication between Men and Women in the Workplace
WORK/LIFE BALANCE
Life/Work
Balance in the Real World
New Year's
Resolutions: A New Approach?
Working with Loved Ones: Leverage Potential and Avoid Pitfalls
Modern Day Stressors: What Stress Looks Like in the 21st Century
The Life Juggle: How to Find Lifework Balance
RESTAURANT & HOSPITALITY
All in the Family
Are You Truly Successful?
How to Create and Maintain the Culture of Your Restaurants
Let's Get Physical
Meditate Stress Away
Taking Stress for a Ride
The Challenge of Change
3 Strategies to Reduce Stress
Cleaning Up Substance Abuse
FEAR &
SELF-DOUBT
Break Through Self-Doubt & Fear
Substance Abuse
The Courage to Feel Bad |
Moving Beyond the Numbers: How
to Recruit and Retain a Diverse Workforce
Part One of a Two-Part Report on
How to Recruit and Retain a Diverse Workforce.
Part 1 - Recruiting a Diverse Workforce
The United States population
is diverse. It's no longer a question of when the workforce will change. It already has. There has been a huge increase in women, people of color and immigrants in the workforce in the last twenty-five years. Diversity is not just a "good idea",
today. it is a business imperative if you want to stay competitive,
innovative and secure a larger market share.
Executives leaders are asking
the question "How do we recruit, engage, and retain that diverse workforce." In
order to answer that question, we need to identify common diversity
mistakes, perceived obstacles, best practices by other leaders
in organizations, and then determine the solution that works
for you.
Common mistakes in diversity recruitment
Organizations
make two common mistakes that cause them to fall behind their competition
and even lose market share.
1. "Company photo
diversity"
The organization only considers the visible dimensions of diversity
primarily race, and gender. The company photo looks good but everyone
thinks the same. Differences that include sexual orientation, geographic
background, thinking and communication style, work function, ability
and disability, religion, and work style are not valued and are
even discouraged. This is a very narrow definition of diversity
and offers little or no value to the organization in terms of new
ideas, creativity and innovation.
2. " Diversity by
Numbers"
Again diversity is defined by what you can see. Demographics reflect
the outside community but it is only at the lower levels. (Production,
and unskilled labor) There is little or no diversity as you move
up into management. When questioned about diversity in their organization,
they point to all the numbers. Every year they have good "numbers",
but the people are constantly changing. Employees leave and get
jobs where there is a value of diversity at all levels and they
are encouraged to move up in the ranks.
Addressing the Issues
To be a successful business
in today's culture you need to create
an environment of inclusion where people feel valued and integrated
into a company's mission, vision and business strategy at all levels.
When employees' skills and knowledge are recognized, appreciated
and utilized they are more engaged in contributing to an organizations' success.
They are more willing to go the 'extra mile' and
share ideas and innovation. The visible and invisible dimensions
of diversity that they bring are used as resources for success
and growth. In order to create an inclusive work environment you
need a diverse workforce.
Recruitment: Assess your need
Clarify your definition of diversity. Include the visible as well
as the invisible dimensions. Conduct a culture assessment of your
organization, department or function using focus groups, interviews
or surveys. Determine whether one or all of these methods would
be most appropriate. Get feedback from customers and identify the
needs of any potential market groups.
Develop a strategy and implementation plan for a diversity/culture
change initiative.
Any culture change must be driven by senior management, and include
the whole organization. Address all systems and processes including
recruitment, employee engagement, retention, and promotion and
performance evaluation.
There are three common reasons why
organizations “drop the
ball” and don’t move forward.
1. “Analysis
and data nullification”
When the assessment is completed,
and data analyzed, leadership is in denial about the results.
Employees lose any trust or hope developed as a result of participating
in the assessment. Leadership places blame on employees for having “hidden agenda”.
2. “Short
-cut solution’
Leadership listens to the report and decides that hiring a member
of one of the underrepresented groups is the answer. Conducts executive
search for best and brightest and declares solution found. There
is no need and no time for any long-term strategy.
3. “Diversity
holding pattern”
Executive leadership holds
strategy meeting, which results in “good
ideas” or long-term vision, but there is no process of accountability
or steps to implement specific actions. Other than discussing the
need for more diversity in the organization there is no plan to
change employee recruiting and retention methods.
How to Recruit, Engage and Retain a Diverse Workforce
Recruitment
If you are serious about implementing
a diversity/culture change initiative, you must create a diverse
pool of candidates. If you always recruit from the same places,
with the same methods, you will always get the same people. There
is still the complaint “We
looked all over and just can’t find any….” In
today’s competitive market you need to be creative. You have
to go where the candidates are and have a long enough lead-time
to get a good selection of candidates.
Research and develop a list of colleges that historically have
large numbers of women, people with disabilities, and people from
different cultural, ethnic and racial backgrounds. Send recruiting
teams to those schools. -
Begin to recruit from middle and
high schools. Attend career days and come prepared to discuss
the benefits of working for your organization and your industry.
GOLDMAN SACHS began a program in 1998 called GS SCHOLARS to introduce
high school students from historically underrepresented groups
to introduce, interest and educate them to business and finance
as a career.
Employers from the publishing industry have participated
in career days and gone into middle schools in racially diverse
areas to interest students in book and newspaper publishing.
When GE NUCLEAR couldn’t find enough qualified college graduates
in nuclear engineering, they began to send recruiters to high schools
to get people interested in the field before they went to college.
Contact various student groups on mainstream campuses and ask
them to suggest the best candidates or include notices about your
organization in their newsletters or other vehicles for communication.
Develop relationships with diversity related organizations; BLACK
STUDENT UNION, NATIVE AMERICAN STUDENTS ORGANIZATION, ASIAN-AMERICAN
STUDENT UNION, MECHA, LGBT organizations, etc.) and sponsor events.
-
Send a diverse team to meet with people at schools and other recruiting
sites and build relationships so your organization will be the
company of choice to apply to work.
-
Develop relationships with diverse community organizations and
let them know about the opportunities in your organization. Sponsor
events such as Juneteenth, Cinco de Mayo, Gay Pride, Chinese New
Year and Disability Awareness Month.
DIAGEO has sponsored LGBT events during
Gay Pride Week in San Francisco and has used marketing and PR
people who specialize in the LGBT market.
Sodexho,
a food and facilities management services company in partnership
with the US PAN ASIAN AMERICAN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE and the
SODEXHO PAN ASIAN NETWORK GROUP have set up as scholarship
for Asian American college juniors who are also involved in
community service
Identify new ways of reaching target markets. In 2002, NURSES
FOR A HEALTHIER TOMORROW, a not-for-profit coalition of 37 nursing
and health care organizations ran promotions in 436 movie theaters
before movies like Spiderman and Star Wars in order reach a young
market who might not have thought about nursing as a career.
-
Create an information process informing all of your employees about open positions, and make it easy to apply. Be open to giving opportunities for excellence to people who are different than you. Become conscious of any biases you may have about other cultures, communication styles, and decision-making processes.
-
Your criteria for interviewing and hiring should be based on qualifications and not just because you are more comfortable with someone who went to the same school, is the same religion or shares your gender or sexual orientation. Have a diverse panel conduct interviews so you can get other perspectives.
-
Include diversity as part of your mission statement and display it on your website and marketing material. One of the first things a potential recruit will do in researching your company will be to look at your website. If it does not state and show a high value for diversity, there is a good chance that recruit will look elsewhere.
DIVERSIFIED MAINTENANCE SERVICES,
a facilities service organization mentions the diversity of
their management team in the first sentence of their mission
statement. "DIVERSIFIED MAINTENANCE SERVICES, INC. (DMS) has
a diverse multicultural management team with decades of combined
management experience, unique in their unparalleled vision
and expertise."
-
Let suppliers and vendors that champion diversity know of any available positions and ask them for referrals.
-
Market your diversity initiative throughout the organization so the word gets out that your environment is a great place for everyone to work. Identify any changes your organization has made regarding diversity and how diversity goals are being met.
-
When using outside recruiters tell them you want a diverse group of candidates and have then show you their track record. There are executive recruiting organizations like THE ELLIOT GROUP and DIVERSE CONNECTIONS who can help you.
-
Identify stereotypes of people who work in your industry and develop strategies for changing perceptions Ex. Firefighting should only be a male occupation. JOHNSON AND JOHNSON created a "discover nursing" campaign featuring male and ethnically diverse nurses in television commercials.
-
Use more inclusive language and visuals in rule books, orientation, and recruiting materials. Make sure all pronouns aren't female in industries like nursing and that all pronouns are not male in industries like law enforcement.
-
Develop relationships with ethnically diverse professional associations and organizations; BLACK MBA, ASIAN MBA, HISPANIC CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, SOCIETY OF WOMEN ENGINEERS, Lesbian and Gay business associations, COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE FOR WOMEN, HACE (HISPANIC ALLIANCE FOR CAREER ENHANCEMENT) etc. Get their calendars and attend their conferences. Even if you are not hiring immediately, talk with people, and get the cards of people who might be potential recruits in the future.
-
Advertise in magazines such as Hispanic, Black MBA, Asian Week, Working Women, Latina, Out and AARP as well as mainline economic journals and on-line publications. Use online recruiting websites that are used by different employee groups such as RECRUITABILITY and MONSTER.COM
-
Be aware of your own biases and stereotypes and their impact on the environment Participate in high-level diversity training.
-
Create processes to make people who are different from you feel welcome and included in your organization, and then use the media to alert potential employees that you are a welcoming inclusive employer.
Organizations like PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS and WELLPOINT advertise in Diversity, Inc and market the diversity of their employees as a strength. This not only increases their customer base but it helps promote them as employers of choice.
-
Mentor people who are from different cultural or ethnic backgrounds or gender from you. It will help you become more comfortable with other people and will help your staff grow in their careers.
-
Incorporate ideas from other cultures to solve problems and be more Innovative.
-
Use resources that are already in place and research what other organizations have done to be successful. Develop relationships with employee affinity groups and keep them apprised of any openings.
-
Provide cross-cultural communication training to help staff work well together and serve the client population more effectively.
-
Survey and interview staff across demographics to determine their needs in order to create a strategic plan for retention and increased recruitment under represented populations.
-
Examine your definition of leadership qualities to include ways in which people who have different thought processes and communication styles can lead. If you have been hierarchical in the past, start learning that people with consensus styles can also be effective leaders and do not exclude them from the recruiting process.
-
Conduct exit interviews and identify patterns and themes if they exist. Be willing to change to accommodate and use new ideas and creativity.
-
Rethink your beliefs that a candidate should always have direct eye contact, be a certain weight or height, speak the way you do, have children, be single, lead in only one way, not be in a wheelchair, not be hearing impaired. Unless there are physical requirements to being able to do the job, don't let your biases exclude excellent candidates.
-
Always
send a recruiting team who have been trained in diversity and
inclusion awareness and are willing to go beyond their comfort
zone to attract the best candidates.
THE COMPASS GROUP, a hospitality and
facilities management corporation trains their recruiters so they
can communicate and interest diverse candidates. They know that the
recruiters are the front line people and how they interact with potential
candidates can be the deciding factor in how that candidate will
follow up.
Part Two covers How to Create an Inclusive Environment
that will Retain a Diverse Workforce.
Simma Lieberman works with people and organizations to create environments where
people can do their best work. She specializes in diversity, gender communications,
life-work balance and stress, and acquiring and retaining new customers.
You may reprint these articles free of charge, on a non-exclusive basis, provided
that Simma Lieberman's name and contact information are included. She would
love to know that you plan to use her article(s); please contact
her to let her know.
Call Simma at 510.527.0700 or Email simma@simmalieberman.com
Visit her website at www.simmalieberman.com
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