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Why Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Need to Be Core Future of Work Tenets, Part II

Last week’s article discussed why diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I) should be considered core tenets of the Future of Work movement. Although the Future of Work is often synonymous with automation- and innovation-led attributes, the truth is that strategy-fueled principles are just as critical as their technological counterparts. As we wrote last week:

“Diversity, equity, and inclusion represent, perhaps, the most important of these strategy-led Future of Work tenets and deserve a rightful place in the pantheon of work optimization approaches. Diverse workforces, inclusive workplaces, and an overall environment of equity can pay massive dividends for businesses seeking to spark innovation within their total talent community.”

I once again spoke with several technology leaders across the contingent workforce, digital staffing, and HR arenas for their unique perspectives on DE&I as core Future of Work tenets:

Jody Mohammed, Vice President, Partnerships and Solutions, Geometric Results, Inc. (GRI)

“DE&I is no longer considered buzzword bingo but rather this important initiative has elevated to a business imperative. This essential, crucial focus has the attention of the C-Suite and we see enormous investment in hiring not only DE&I leaders to establish policies but the importance of partnering with talent partner organizations that deliver against the goals. Companies now expect their partners to deliver a diversified workforce and provide the data to demonstrate trends/progress. Simultaneously, top talent is assessing an organization’s DE&I DNA and when evidence is presented, it is much easier to attract and retain talent. We see significant investment dollars in this important area and know it’s a journey. By engaging with talent partners who are committed and have a mature strategy of attracting and hiring diverse talent, we are contributing to the client’s goals and objectives. Clients’ internal focus, commitment, and training on DE&I means they are better equipped to recognize signs of bias and exclusion and act. This concerted effort to design policies within our clients is delivering teams that diverse in their thoughts which is netting greater innovation, a positive brand and culture.”

Judy Ellis, Head of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Advisory (Americas), AMS

“There’s no denying that business leaders are placing a greater emphasis on diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) within their workforces. When we consider the future of work, leaders will need to adapt and evolve their talent acquisition strategies to take into account not only the make-up of the workforce of tomorrow, but also what each segment seeks from a potential employer. Changing demographics will be an extremely important consideration in the ‘Future of Work’ movement and, as a result, dynamic workplace strategies will be needed to manage the changing expectations of future talent which will skew across each new generation. Younger generations, for example, are more in tune with an employers’ brand, mission and vision, and a commitment to DEI will be a key influencer in affinity for prospective employers. And if we look at demographic predictions from the Economic Policy Institute, which predicts that by 2032 people of color will become a majority of the American working class, employers will also have to adapt their strategies to reflect this. As groups that were once underrepresented look likely to become the majority of the workforce, their unique needs, perspectives, and contributions will have even more importance and therefore must be considered in future talent acquisition strategies.”

“With the rise of contingent populations, business leaders will also need to take this growing segment of the workforce into consideration when developing future strategies. Many of our clients are actively doing so and there is certainly a deeper appreciation for how diversity within contingent populations can positively impact diversity within permanent employee groups. This is not only because of the propensity for contractor conversion – which allows workers to almost ‘test’ a company’s culture – but also because in some leading organizations there are more contingent resources than permanent employees. Consequently, at a time when different segments of the workforce – including emerging generations and underrepresented groups – are undoubtedly placing culture and a clear commitment to DEI as key requisites of a future employer, employers must ensure that their workplace strategies reflect this.”

Catherine Candland, President, nextSource

As a certified woman-owned business enterprise, diversity and inclusion is always front of mind at nextSource.   We strive to provide an inclusive culture within nextSource, where 45% of our staff identify themselves as being members of a diversity category.  We actively recruit MWBE, Disadvantaged Small Business, and Veteran-Owned suppliers.  nextSource has for many years conducted a supplier diversity nurturing program in which we leverage our buying power to increase the competitiveness of minority suppliers, encourage customers to automatically include diversity suppliers for Tier 1 distribution, and we share market intelligence data and business development leads.  To ensure candidate diversity, we launched a Community Workforce Development program to recruit and place workers from within disadvantaged neighborhoods.  We assign a community liaison who partners with representatives from community/civic organizations, business groups, churches, technology centers, educational institutions, cultural centers, local media, and government agencies. And, we work closely with each client to ensure the smooth transition of minority candidates into their workforce. 

However, we recognize that achieving a truly diverse, inclusive culture does not happen without continuous focus and innovative initiatives.  We conduct internal training to ensure that our staff has the knowledge and skills needed to manage culturally and demographically diverse groups.  We then serve as diversity advocates with our clients, helping to build programs that work effectively across differences and support diversity, equality, and inclusion.

Rasmus Pedersen, VP Customer Experience, Diversity and Inclusion Lead, Pontoon

“At Pontoon, we help our customers activate their Diversity, Equity and Inclusion strategies by providing candidates who are representative of the communities our customers serve. When our customers have an inclusive culture where people can truly bring their full self to work, our ability to attract diverse talent increases dramatically, as does our customers’ ability to innovate.”

“You cannot talk about innovation without also discussing diversity. At its core, innovation is about serving the unmet need of your customer base, current or future. To enable innovation, you must ensure your workforce is representative of the communities you serve and the customer base you pursue.”

Kevin Poll, Global Head of Strategic Partnerships, D&I Champion, WillHire

“By 2023, over 52% of the workforce will be made up of freelancers. With this being such a large portion of an organization’s total workforce, those organizations which are committed to D&I must consider their diversity and inclusion strategies across all categories of workers.”

“Millennials will dominate the workforce by 2025 (75%) and most of them prioritize diversity when evaluating work engagements.  We have all heard the phrase “war for talent” and recognizing the importance of diversity and inclusion to the talent supply chain is critical to attract and engage great talent.”

Nina G. Vaca, Chairman and CEO, Pinnacle Group

“In addition to DE&I being the right thing to do – always and forever – there are three critical reasons to include it as a core tenet in the Future of Work movement. First, it upgrades your talent. Second, it makes you a more desirable place to work. Third, more diverse organizations consistently outperform their peers. I simply can’t think of a more obvious strategic imperative for any organization than to elevate its DE&I strategy.”

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Why Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Need to Be Core Future of Work Tenets, Part I

If you’ve listened to the Contingent Workforce Weekly podcast over the past few years, you may have heard me utter this phrase many times: when it comes to the Future of Work movement, non-technological attributes are just as critical as technology and innovation. Aspects like flexible business thinking, transformative leadership, and an overall agile culture can be just as crucial to an enterprise as the new technology they leverage to get work done.

Diversity, equity, and inclusion represent, perhaps, the most important of these strategy-led Future of Work tenets and deserve a rightful place in the pantheon of work optimization approaches. Diverse workforces, inclusive workplaces, and an overall environment of equity can pay massive dividends for businesses seeking to spark innovation within their total talent community.

I spoke with several technology leaders across the contingent workforce, digital staffing, and HR arenas for their unique perspectives on DE&I as core Future of Work tenets:

Brian Hoffmeyer, SVP of Market Strategies, Beeline

“Leaders should place the same (or – frankly – more) emphasis on DE&I when compared to other Future of Work topics because, first and foremost, it is the right thing to do; we believe that companies and individuals have an imperative to ensure that historically underrepresented people are treated inclusively and equitably. Second, diverse teams win – study after study shows that more diverse teams and companies out-innovate and outperform those who are not. Finally, based on the first two reasons, there is so much opportunity to drive DE&I initiatives in the extended workforce as these programs often lag their full-time counterparts and companies can more quickly hit their DE&I goals due to the transitive nature of this critical part of the workforce.”

Allison Robinson, Founder and CEO, The Mom Project

“By 2025, millennials will make up 75% of the workforce, and they are the most diverse in American history. If you aren’t actively creating a diverse and inclusive environment for future talent that is front and center in every aspect of your business and culture, you will miss out on this talent. Technology investment and digital transformations mean little without the commitment to a more diverse workforce behind them to drive results.”

David Trachtenberg, Chief Marketing Officer, Workforce Logiq

“For too long, organizations have focused their DE&I programs on dollar diversity – their percentage of spend with diverse suppliers. While important, there must be equality of focus on an organization’s most critical asset: its people. An organization’s talent, both contingent and full-time, must reflect the broader sense of community in which it works – and from which it recruits. It’s the right thing to do, and it’s good for business. For example, our proprietary AI-powered insights quantify how visibility in the workplace impacts employee retention: women are over 1.5X more at risk and open to leaving their current role vs. their male counterparts when there are fewer women colleagues represented in their workplace. So, while technology, innovation and other Future of Work aspects are key areas of focus – DE&I is a proven investment to ensure organizations have the engaged talent with which to succeed.”

Rebecca Perrault, Senior Director, Diversity and Inclusion, PRO Unlimited

“Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DE&I) has been a topic for the traditional workforce for decades. Research has shown that a diverse and inclusive workplace increases revenue growth and the ability to innovate gives you access to highly qualified talent. Ultimately, we are talking about dynamics that impact people and will see the same amazing results from a focus on DE&I in the workforce of the future. It is long overdue that the contingent workforce be included. The workforce of the future is rapidly expanding and presents a huge opportunity for organizations as they consider their business strategies. Now is the time to embed DE&I —  not after the processes have been instituted. To fully realize all the many benefits of DE&I, we need to seize this opportunity.”

Brooke Stovall, Inclusion and Diversity Marketplace Manager, Allegis Global Solutions

“A strong DEI strategy is vital to an organization’s ability to attract and retain great talent. And in the Future of Work, your ability to leverage technology, innovate and evolve at today’s accelerated pace of change hinges on your ability to attract and retain a talented and engaged workforce.

The challenge that arises from bringing DEI into the conversation as a core tenet of the Future of Work movement is that unlike a lot of conversations around technology and innovation, DEI cannot be automated. Developing, nurturing and prioritizing a truly inclusive culture that prioritizes belonging takes sweat equity. It involves conversations and evaluating processes and cultural norms, and bringing DEI into more conversations beyond HR.

Globally, the DEI conversation has expanded from a focus on talent attraction – sourcing, networking, recruiting – to talent retention. It is not enough to bring diverse hires through the door, if the environment and culture they’re coming into isn’t one that prioritizes inclusion and belonging, which are core to the employee experience. It is a financial and time investment to hire someone, you want (and need) them to be successful.

A challenge to business leaders emphasizing DEI like other aspects of the Future of Work, is that you can’t automate or purchase a technology to do all of the work for you. While quantitative and qualitative data and analysis is required to identify gaps and opportunities, and help you track progress, the real work on inclusion and belonging in the workplace requires sweat equity from people across the organization. Inclusion and belonging is everyone’s responsibility, requiring active participation from the highest levels of the company to people a few desks over.”

Maria Luoni, President, RightSourcing

“The past few years have brought to the forefront that a focus on diversity is only part of the equation.  Inclusion is another. Both of these concepts will remain a top focus for organizations in years to come.  Equity is something altogether different. Many innovative organizations are also focusing on the idea of “equity” as part of their overall strategy. This focus in the workplace will be a magnified topic as organizations are being called to operate with a deeper level of transparency around compensation reporting, board representation, harassment reporting, advancement and other talent management practices.”

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Four Predictions for the Future of Work in 2021

Ardent Partners defines the “Future of Work” movement as a series of ideas across the talent, technology, and business transformation spectrum that augment how enterprises ultimately optimize how work is done. The challenging events of 2020 did not just stress the limits of business operations, but also accelerated key facets of the Future of Work movement; in fact, some key aspects of the “new normal” that enterprises face in 2021 are, in fact, innovative strategies and solutions that just several months ago were necessary approaches to survive in unprecedented times.

Several critical aspects of the Future of Work movement, amongst others, are crucial beacons of innovation that will assist enterprises in navigating through the initial, unsteady early months of the year ahead:

  • The (faster-than-expected) evolution of talent engagement and talent acquisition. Less than five years ago, only 12% of talent was engaged and sourced via “real-time” or “on-demand” means, such as digital staffing technology, tech-enabled talent marketplaces, and direct sourcing/talent pool-based programs. Today, that number hovers around a third (33%) of all talent engaged/acquired via real-time means, with a heavy increase expected as 2021 drags on. Ardent Partners expects, for instance, the utilization of direct sourcing strategies to increase threefold over the next 12 months, owed to the fact that talent pools (and their subsequent link to global enterprise recruitment streams) allow businesses to tap into “known and vetted” talent in an on-demand manner. Too, as businesses opt for less in-person interviews and a need for faster time-to-fill rates as a result of workforce scalability, other solutions, particularly talent marketplaces, will become critically important for shoring up the total workforce.
  • The acceleration of work optimization via true digital transformation. The concept of “digital transformation” has been part of business vernacular for several years, with many C-level executives (hello, CIO!) spearheading initiatives to digitally enhance specific (or all) enterprise processes for maximum optimization, speed, and efficiency. In 2020, businesses quickly experienced the pitfalls of social distancing and closed offices as scores of workers could not execute traditional and repeatable processes without access to a physical location (or, even worse: lack of access to archaic manual processes). Digital transformation in 2021 must be “table stakes” for the typical enterprise as the pandemic continues to disrupt live and in-person tactics.
  • The rise of flexibility-led leadership. 2020 was the most “human” year of the average business professional (and, thus far, 2021 will surely continue this trend). Pandemic-led anxiety, a lack of schooling or daycare (and the stress of remote learning), and general health concerns sat in constant alignment with the typical stressors of corporate life. Flexibility- and agility-led strategies were quickly employed (i.e., the agile workforce) during the initial phases of 2020’s challenging times, however, there was an undercurrent of another interesting attribute that quietly separated business leaders from one another: the rise of “empathy-led” leadership. Business leaders that led with an empathetic approach are the ones that will be able to build trust, confidence, and, most importantly of all, retention, within the ranks of their highly valued workforce. Converging empathy and agility into flexibility-led leadership allows business leaders to assist their workers during moments of need by providing more flexible work arrangements, measuring productivity by outcomes instead of hours worked, and, in general, being more inclusive of what is happening with the personal lives of their staff.
  • And…the biggest prediction of 2021: a critical spike in the utilization of the extended workforce. This prediction may have the biggest impact of all: the business world will draw the closest it has ever been to half of its total workforce comprised of non-employee and agile talent. As businesses employ staffing scalability with the optimism of vaccines and economic recovery ahead, the contingent workforce will become ever more critical in helping enterprises across the globe not only survive in these trying times, but also thrive as they seek to truly optimize how work is done.
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21 Thoughts for 2021: Future of Work Edition

Below we have 21 thoughts for 2021 related to the Future of Work:

  1. Whether or not you despise terms such as “new normal” or “next normal,” most of 2021 for businesses will be spent dealing with 2020-esque issues on top of adapting to a “changed” world of work.
  2. To that effect, is it time for businesses to create a “Chief New Normal Officer” role?
  3. Before we even get started on technology and innovation, no business should be thinking about the optimization impact of automation without first reevaluating their diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives.
  4. And, speaking of D&I, this idea traverses beyond merely checking a box: in 2021, more so than ever before, diversity and inclusion will be true competitive drivers in an increasingly-globalized economy.
  5. And let’s talk about that economy: businesses must know the difference between a weirdly-strong stock market and the reality of unemployment on the ground, and how this major gap will continue to affect the scalability of hiring in the first half of 2021.
  6. That word, scalability, means so much more than ever before. Businesses must equate scalability with agility if they want to thrive in yet another uncertain and unprecedented year.
  7. Procurement, meet HR. HR, meet procurement. Let’s make 2021 the year of true total talent management by blending the best attributes of each function!
  8. Pre-pandemic, direct sourcing was perhaps the hottest topic in the world of talent. Mid-pandemic, it proved to be an invaluable strategy in the face of hiring uncertainty. In 2021, direct sourcing continues this push…and every organization should implement some measure of talent pool development if they haven’t done so already.
  9. Also, on that topic: businesses should understand that direct sourcing automation (i.e., true direct sourcing platforms) and branded direct sourcing services (ala MSP-like services) will be the solutions that push direct sourcing even further in the year ahead.
  10. Supply chain disruptions were expected to occur even before the pandemic hit due to escalating trade tensions around the world. With the pandemic’s unprecedented disruptions upsetting the world’s global supply chain, there were major lessons to be learned. Old-school and traditional supply chains are now primed for touchless, agile, and AI-led processes to improve the overall flow of goods and products.
  11. Another ramification of the pandemic? “The biggest remote work experiment in global history.” Now that we’re nearly 10 months removed from the initial shock of the “work-from-anywhere” approach, businesses are finding that productivity hasn’t waned, but rather been enhanced due to a lack of unnecessary in-person meetings, long commutes, etc.
  12. And there’s so much more to the remote work revolution than just acceptance and implementation of WFH approaches: embracing the work-from-anywhere model is just the initial step. Business leaders must optimize the remote work infrastructure through unified communications and more innovative collaborative tools, like virtual reality. While I’m not advocating for every business to create video-game-like VR environments for their workplaces, slowly integrating similar technologies into the remote infrastructure should help boost the overall employee experience, even if they’re at home.
  13. Speaking of business leaders: leadership must change in 2021. It’s not an option. 2020 was an unprecedented year (take a shot, those still playing 2020 bingo!) and many facets of traditional corporate leadership were tested beyond their limits. Flexibility and empathy should be the foundational elements of business leadership not just in 2021, but also moving forward.
  14. I understand that it can be difficult for business leaders to give more of their patience in the year ahead. However, the one common element of the pandemic was that it affected everyone…meaning that white-collar and blue-collar workers alike experienced similar hardships, such as a lack of daycare due to remote or closed schools. Talent is a company’s #1 competitive differentiator, so: business leaders, do what you can to lead with an empathetic approach if you want to keep that talent.
  15. The “talent experience” was an incredible facet of the pre-pandemic business world, and, if there’s one attribute of life in 2019 that should make a return to 2021 it’s the overall experience of all types of work (both FTEs and non-employees). Individuals with unique or advanced skillsets will have amazing opportunities as the world gets back to a steady state; therefore, it is imperative that businesses do all that they can do to keep their highly-valued workers on-board through robust talent experience efforts.
  16. There’s another concept with the word “talent” in it that is oft-overlooked: talent sustainability. Businesses already understand the value of both agility and flexibility in regard to their staffing and workforce initiatives. However, what happens if principles such as talent redeployment, talent pools, and direct sourcing become even more integrated into the realm of agile talent? The answer: a sustainable, “redeployable,” and agile stream of talent that is leveraged as needed in a dynamic manner.
  17. The elephant in the conference room: do businesses mandate that their employees receive the COVID-19 vaccine when it is available for their age group (besides the front line, of course)? Can businesses even mandate something like this? Expect this conversation to occur soon if it hasn’t yet already.
  18. We haven’t even discussed data yet! Wow. Well, to no one’s surprise: data and intelligence are going to be critical in a post-COVID world. Businesses must do whatever they can, and, of course, harness the power of innovation and automation, to gain as much visibility into their total workforce as possible. Not only is “total talent intelligence” a gateway to the realm of total talent management, but it will also help business leaders (hello HR, hello procurement) understand where their workers are, what they are working on, and any compliance risks that are apparent. Also, in a public health-conscious environment, businesses can leverage total talent intelligence to move on-site work to remote if needed (and vice versa) and measure global locations in relation to virus hotspots and more.
  19. Another discussion about data: in 2019, news regarding artificial intelligence and machine learning ruled the business realm. This, of course, took a backseat over the past year. Businesses lightly understood the value of bringing AI into how they execute strategic talent, staffing, and workforce decisions, however, 2021 is the year that AI is fully ensconced into both contingent workforce management and talent acquisition. Businesses must harness the power of AI to better understand how to attract passive candidates, the markets in which to target, and the variability around skillsets and expertise around the world.
  20. If you read the news (how can you not?), the early weeks of 2021 are literally an extension of 2020. However, the one major difference: there is more hope. There is optimism. The fantastic Angela Rasmussen said on Twitter: there is a light at the top as we continue to climb up from the dark well that was 2020. There will be hard work ahead, but we must keep climbing. We know these times will soon get better, that the darkness will subside. It’ll just take some time; and, that is what business leaders around the globe must drill into their minds: that we’ve already spent nearly a year living in the strangest of times and that the end is in sight. Hope and optimism can be incredible levers when the collective personal, social, and business realms are already exhausted.
  21. Finally: if there’s anything that we learned from 2020, it’s that businesses should expect the unexpected, that the steady ground we seek from the past is still a bit shaky from the experiences of the past 12 months. Innovative thinking can be a force to get through these challenging times. Looking ahead, the Future of Work movement has so much to offer from strategic, talent, staffing, technology, and business transformation perspectives. In 2021, businesses will get back to doing what they do best: optimizing how work is done.
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Why Diversity and Inclusion Should Be Core Future of Work Tenets

Years ago, the concept of “diversity” in contingent workforce management (CWM) was unfortunately too often a supplier-related aspect that was meant to certify specific suppliers as part of wider federal or business mandate to include organizations that were owned by groups in the women, minority, veteran (or service-disabled veteran), LGBT+, neurodiverse, and disabled demographics. Although “supplier diversity” dates back to the 1950s, for far too many organizations, it was merely another box to check and another quota to meet when it came to supply management.

Over the past several years, however, diversity and inclusion have (thankfully!) broken out of the box of mandated initiatives and thrust into a truly strategic stratosphere. That is not to say that there weren’t many businesses that already considered these initiatives as strategic and impactful (and kudos to those organizations, of course), it is that the conversations around D&I have broken out of supplier-based discussions and into the Future of Work movement. In fact, there are several key reasons why D&I initiatives must be considered core tenets of the Future of Work today, in 2021, and beyond:

  • Businesses building progressive corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives benefit from D&I strategies. Whether it is the drive to support local businesses or contribute to enterprise CSR strategies, D&I initiatives help boost the overall allure of a business when it comes to attracting new customers AND new talent. A commitment to not only sustainability, but also dedication to cultural, gender, and racial equality, bolsters the enterprise’s devotion to ethical causes and positions it highly amongst the competition.
  • “A diverse talent pool is the deepest talent pool.” I’ve often repeated this phrase when speaking at industry conferences, on webinars, and frequently on the Contingent Workforce Weekly Talent pools have revolutionized the way businesses structure their recruitment and hiring strategies, curating segments of candidates that are typically more “known” (i.e. silver medalists, alumni, retirees, etc.) for inclusion in greater enterprise recruitment streams. Diverse talent pools that are inclusive in nature are more apt to offer the top-tier level of skillsets and expertise required to complete complex projects and manage intricate initiatives. A diverse talent pool is most certainly the deepest talent pool (there, I said it again!).
  • The Future of Work movement thrives on innovation, and diverse workforces bring exactly that to the modern business. As business competition becomes more fierce (especially in 2020 and 2021), innovation is what will drive organizations to truly thrive in an increasingly globalized corporate world. How this relates to D&I is quite simple: the more diverse voices within a business, the more opportunity for new ideas, new strategies, and new approaches towards product development, sales and marketing, internal operations, and, of course, innovation.
  • Inclusion is the foundation of the 2021 workforce. Inclusion also includes the concept of flexibility. Companies have learned that remote workers and the “work-from-anywhere” approach foster just as much productivity and output as traditional workforce structures. As the global pandemic taught us, this type of environment can be advantageous when faced with uncertain circumstances. What it means for 2021 (and beyond), however, is that businesses can (and should) be more inclusive of candidates that require flexibility within their roles. At the end of the day, if strong and robust business outcomes are the key objective, then inclusion is the pathway to getting there.
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