Why gender equity is good for business

[Music]

hi

and welcome to tedx seattle community

conversations i’m your host phil klein

and today i’m here with sarah sanford

the founder

of thinkgen the gender equity

and inclusion organization that is

responsible for developing the first

certification

for gender equity at workplaces in the

united states

she is also a lecturer at the university

of washington

sarah thank you so much for taking the

time to join us today

thank you phil i’m i’m excited to be

back with the tedx family this is fun

yes well your talk has now received over

a million and a half views as i see

um so it’s thrilling to see that it’s

getting

additional attention in the last six

months especially

so congratulations on that and we really

look forward to hearing from you about

how the work has been going

what progress you’ve been seeing um

perhaps you could give us an update of

you know how things have been going in

your work

in the last 10 or 18 months since you

gave your talk

sure um since giving the talk

i mean it’s it’s been such a great tool

to have

and you know i’m gonna go full

disclosure and no way did tedx

ask me to brag about the great

experience that is tedx

but i think for our organization it’s

been great

because our approach to equity and

inclusion

isn’t something that really fits in a

tweet it’s not a slogan

you know it treats equity and inclusion

as being

as complex and nuanced as it really is

and so

getting the chance to give that talk and

have it recorded and then share it with

people

has been this moment in which people say

oh i get

it okay i understand the difference when

you talk about treating equity and

inclusion

like any other critical business

function um and what it means to really

focus on changing

mechanics rather than mindsets so

we’ve been working with you know a

greater variety of organizations and one

of the things that i think we’re seeing

play out now in you know the midst

of this crisis that everyone is trying

to cope with

is that the organizations that we

started working with

18 months ago or 12 months ago

are really riding out this crisis

better you know compared to their

competitors

a lot of them are saying that you know

the tools that they put in place

because of gen are allowing them to

continue to be more inclusive

even while everyone’s working from home

and so i think part of that is that you

know

if equity and inclusion have now been

front of mind

for a year it was front of mind

when they had to cope with this crisis

and they had to

really think of how is everyone still

going to play as meaningful a role

in the organization that you know that

was kind of a habit and a practice they

built up by then and then frankly one of

the things you know that we work with

organizations on

is making remote work inclusive and how

to make their flexible work policies

really be accessible to everyone

because we tend to see stigmas in the

workplace where certain groups

are really encouraged to take time and

other groups get stigmatized if they do

and so fortunately a lot of these orgs

really have policies

in place now going into the pandemic

where everyone can work at home and

still be included so that’s been great

to see

and in the certification that you’ve

been offering companies

what kinds of metrics still apply

and are easy to continue to measure

and manage you know now that we’re

social distanced and

many people are working remotely and

from home

yeah that’s a great question so the ones

that have to do with remote work are

obviously being emphasized a lot more

um so you know some of the things we

talk with organizations about

have to do with meetings and meeting

behaviors

especially you know when they used to

take place in person

um our focus on equity and inclusion

really is about driving organizations to

harness say

the collective intelligence of everyone

in the room so what we used to see is

that

companies would bring in diverse

recruits

and then they wouldn’t truly be included

and one of the places that really used

to happen was in meetings

so there was this common phenomenon of

people

either being interrupted or having their

ideas stolen by other people

and then they’re not giving credit for

them um or they just don’t get a chance

to comment so one of the things that we

found in our research

is that men and especially white men

are likely to respond the fastest

when being asked a question in a meeting

so they’re likely to raise their hands

before the question is even finished or

immediately after

women and racial minorities tend to take

longer

and have a bit of a pause that doesn’t

mean that they’re you know

actually thinking any more slowly it’s

usually that

their input has been held to a higher

standard so they’re considering more

factors

so one of the things we recommend in

organizations you know if they truly

want the input of everyone who works

there

and they want to harness the power of

diverse insight we

tell them to institute a pause you know

so we say ask that question and just

make it a rule that

nobody raises their hands for a minute

or for two minutes

and then ask for feedback so that’s one

of these tricks that we’re

recommending organizations really

transfer to the remote environment

you know because everyone’s having zoo

meetings now and

it’s created a new kind of playing field

to level

you know so we’ve been reaching out to a

lot of orgs about

how to make your zoom meetings really

intentionally inclusive

and still make sure to get that feedback

from everyone

and in some ways you know it i think for

some people

it feels more inclusive um they can you

know write their feedback in the chat

window

they have other ways now to really be

included

but we’re also seeing that you know it

can be harder to evaluate work

um so we’re also working with a lot of

organizations on how to make their

performance evaluations still mean

something because i think now you know

we’ve realized this isn’t going to be a

week this isn’t going to be a month

this unfortunately is something that has

lasted a long time

um and so we’re working with that and

then

honestly for a lot of them it’s it’s

that they were in the midst

of creating these really great dei

inclusion strategies and then the

pandemic came

and they had to pause and they’re kind

of panicked

and they may have a different

organization

you know that they go back to in 2021

and so we’re really just helping them

figure out how do we keep dei front of

mind how do we not let this go how do we

not give up on this

wow so no shortage of opportunities for

improvement

i would love to slow down and unpack

some of what you

shared you described

the importance of doing an assessment

you know at the beginning of working

with an organization

and then there is change that is

uh surfaced and that can be implemented

through

uh some of the specific recommendations

uh that you suggested

and then there is what the

uh progress of that actually looks like

in the workplace and then measuring that

progress

so there’s plenty of complexity in that

can you walk us

through a scenario where you start to

see that change

actually taking root and taking hold and

then

generating results if there are examples

like that

yeah that’s yes that’s a great question

um so our assessment you know i think

everyone has survey fatigue

at this point and i completely

understand why

um so you know our assessment does

include this employee survey

we’re proud to say we’ve gotten the

average time to take it down to 14

minutes

um but what that survey is designed to

do is

really reveal these gaps and experience

between certain groups in the workplace

so

it’s not really a typical employee

engagement survey

we’re not asking these big nebulous

questions like do you think you work in

a

fair workplace we ask questions

like has your manager asked you

about your career development goals in

the last 12 months

and so as an example looking at our

national data because we keep the survey

open on our website just to keep getting

a baseline

when i look at that national data right

now as an answer to that question

72 percent of men say yes and 44 of

women

and so our employee survey is really

full of questions like that that are

just

asking if people you know have been

talked to by their senior manager if

they’ve been invited into professional

development opportunities that are

business related

things that are really objective and

trackable

and those tend to be the moments that we

bring to leadership and that’s their aha

moment

you know so that’s kind of the first

place where we see change you know we

talk about we don’t do trainings

and we don’t but in a lot of ways the

results of the data

end up being their own training and that

they become this opportunity for leaders

to look at this data

and see in really tangible ways okay

different groups

have been having very different

experiences in our organization and

that’s you know despite good intentions

that’s despite the fact that leaders

really wanted to center equity and

inclusion

um so we start with that you know we do

this employee survey

we do a processes audit which just which

is sounds like such a scary word when we

say audit

but it just means that we ask a point of

contact

what the written policies in an

organization are you know so do you pay

leave policies do you have

a nursing room do you have remote work

what does your recruiting strategy look

like

and then we pause and you know we

look at that data that comes back from

employees we look at that data that

comes back from hr

and so yes we look for those gaps

in experience but we also look at gaps

between those two stories

so sometimes you know an hr rep will

tell us

yes we have a paid leave policy and then

none of their employees are saying that

um and so that tends to be this good

moment in which you know it’s not that

we think hr is lying to us

but a lot of times like hr has put in

all this work to build inclusive

policies and they just haven’t been

communicated out

to the organization effectively and that

ends up being kind of another moment of

change where the organization goes oh

this is why people aren’t happy they

actually don’t know these things exist

um they actually don’t know that we put

this kind of effort in

and then you know the other part that

really takes up you know most of our

work

in a great way is seeing that there are

well-intended policies that

unfortunately aren’t evidence-backed

um that haven’t been implemented in

the right way and we look at those

policies and we end up revamping them to

counter the impact of bias you know we

really end up

optimizing them to counter the impact of

bias so

as an example of what that looks like um

panel interviews are a common example of

this

they became very trendy in the dei

conversation

people thought okay if we have a panel

that’s interviewing a candidate

and we have a woman or

a person of color on that panel then

we’ve done our job then we have diverse

insights being provided on who we should

hire

what actually ends up happening you know

we talk about the hippo effect the

highest paid person in the room

um is that everyone on that panel

if they’re together will just default

to the opinion of the highest paid or

the dominant person in the group

so we really recommend to organizations

like split up that panel have each

person on that panel

separately interview the candidate with

their own sets of questions

and then we help them you know

standardize the rest of the interview

evaluation process because it’s this

area that is just so prone to our biases

whether or not we want to believe it

you know in ways that have nothing to do

even with gender race where we found

that if people interview candidates in

the afternoon

they’re less likely to hire them than

people they interview in the morning

so it’s something that really can be

impacted by design at every level

and then you know we see these other

changes that

i think organizations may may never hear

the impact they have

the one that you know got to me

is that we heard from

an employee of an organization

that we were certifying that ended up

expanding their health care to cover

dependence

that’s one of our you know criteria in

the certification we look at their

healthcare

and so the employee wrote to us and said

that she was

able to now leave an abusive

relationship that she had been in

because she was previously dependent on

her partner’s health care

to cover their child together and now

she didn’t have to be in that anymore

because her employer was providing us

and so she could leave

so you know one of the really incredible

things that we get to see is how

the impact of these changes end up

extending

far beyond the office into people’s

everyday lives

yes that’s that is powerful i mean that

has the transformational effect in

individuals lives and

you know thinking a little more on this

question of unconscious bias

uh there is a way in which

it sounds like you’re seeing people feel

like if they’ve done anything

then it’s easy for them to think they’ve

done everything

right and that the problem is solved as

soon as they’ve taken the first

step and it can be harder to kind of

keep looking

as you uncover either that bias

or aim towards a new state a changed

state

um and if you take a a a very specific

uh problem maybe like getting credit for

their ideas

uh for women and people of color to more

actively being

given credit for the ideas they come up

with in an organization

can you see uh that kind of change

happening and what it looks like

when an organization fully and clearly

gives credit where it’s due

yeah i the word that comes to mind that

other people have told me that like i

don’t get to be there and witness but

the other employees tell me is that it’s

energizing

um i think one of the coolest things

about it is that it has this impact for

everyone in the organization

that they end up having this return to

innovation

and this really energizing return to

having new ideas

being presented in the workplace because

you’re finally hearing from people that

have been there for years

but for a variety of reasons have had

barriers that have prevented them from

being heard

um and so obviously you know i think for

the underrepresented or i often like to

say

it’s an arlen hamilton phrase i have to

give her credit the underestimated

people in the workplace it’s just this

relief and it’s something incredibly new

to finally have your ideas heard um

you know i get asked a lot

what the most common problems are

that we see in the workplace for women

and people of color

and you know usually that question is a

bit leading and there’s there’s a

preamble that’s like oh i bet you see

some really terrible me too incidents

um and i say you know sure those happen

but what i see most frequently

are these barriers to just

being taken seriously you know if i

could put kind of all these problems

into one bucket

i think it would be not being taken

seriously and that that actually ends up

being the most pernicious

you know where i’ve worked in the

finance industry before

um i was there for five years and it was

like both things happened

you know i was sexually sexually

harassed in the finance industry

and i had situation after situation in

which i was ignored

and i know that that in many ways felt

more harmful

for me to feel like i put in all this

work and wasn’t hurt

and so i think for a lot of women

minorities it’s this moment where

all of the work they’ve done up to that

point is finally

honored um and i think you know part of

the change that happens is that we get

these great stories of leaders

reaching out to their employees and

saying you know

we got back this data i’m sorry we

haven’t really acknowledged this in a

real way up to this point

and leaders acknowledge we’re at the

starting line and i think that is the

most impressive thing that a company can

do i think that’s the thing that ends up

having the biggest impact i

i understand why a lot of organizations

hesitate to say

we have a problem you know the moment

you say that

you’re liable for fixing that problem

for doing something about it

um but otherwise employees just feel

like year after year they haven’t been

heard

they feel a little bit of that am i nuts

sense

and that moment in which you know their

stories and knowledge

tends to really shift the energy in

organizations

sarah thank you so much really really

appreciate you taking the time

chris thank you phil i appreciate it

you

[音乐]

,欢迎来到 tedx 西雅图社区

对话,我是您的主持人 phil klein

,今天我与 thinkgen 的创始人 sarah sanford 一起在这里,

这是性别平等和包容性组织,

负责制定第一个

工作场所性别平等认证 在

美国,

她也是华盛顿大学的讲师

sarah 非常感谢您

今天抽出时间加入我们

谢谢您 phil 我很高兴能

回到 tedx 大家庭这很有趣

是的 谈话现在已经收到了超过

一百万的浏览量

你看到了什么进展,

也许你可以告诉我们你的最新情况,

你知道

自从你发表演讲以来,过去 10 或 18 个月你的工作进展如何,

确定你 自从发表演讲以来,

我的意思是它是一个非常棒的工具

,你知道我会全面

披露,tedx 没有

让我吹嘘 tedx 的伟大

经验,

但我认为对于我们的组织来说,它

一直是 太好了,

因为我们对待公平和

包容

的方法并不真正适合

推文它不是一个口号,

你知道它把公平和包容

视为复杂和细微差别

,因此

有机会发表演讲并

拥有 它记录下来然后与人们分享

一直是人们说

哦,我明白了

,我理解当

你谈论

像对待任何其他关键业务

职能一样对待公平和包容时的区别,以及真正

专注于改变

机制意味着什么 而不是心态,所以

我们一直在与你合作,了解

更多种类的组织

,我认为我们现在看到的事情之一

在你知道在

这场危机中,每个人都知道 e

试图应对的

是,与我们

18 个月前或 12 个月前开始合作

的组织

确实比他们的竞争对手更好地度过了这场危机 即使每个人都在家工作,

因为 gen 的位置允许他们

继续更具包容性

,所以我认为部分原因是你

知道公平和包容性现在是否已经成为

头等大事

了一年,当他们成为头等大事

时 必须应对这场危机

,他们必须

真正思考每个人如何

仍然在组织中发挥有意义的作用

,你知道这

是他们当时建立的一种习惯和实践

,然后坦率地说

您知道我们与

组织合作的事情

是使远程工作具有包容性,以及如何

使每个人都可以真正使用他们的灵活工作政策,

因为我们倾向于在获得

证书的工作场所看到耻辱

确实鼓励各个团体花时间,而

其他团体如果这样做会受到污名化

,幸运的是,这些组织中的许多现在

确实制定了

政策,进入了大流行

,每个人都可以在家工作并且

仍然被包括在内,所以很

高兴看到

在您向公司提供的认证中,

哪些指标仍然适用

并且易于继续衡量

和管理,您知道现在我们

与社会保持距离,

许多人都在远程和在家工作,

是的,这是一个很好的问题,所以

与远程工作有关的那些

显然被强调了很多,

所以你知道我们

与组织谈论的

一些事情与会议和会议

行为有关,

特别是你知道他们过去是什么时候亲自

发生的 关注公平和包容

真的是要推动组织

利用

房间里每个人的集体智慧,所以我们过去看到的

是 公司会引入不同的

新兵

,然后他们就不会真正被包括在内

,而真正曾经发生过的地方之一

是在会议上,

所以人们

要么被打断,要么

被其他人窃取他们的想法

,然后他们 ' 没有给予

他们信任,或者他们只是没有机会

发表评论,所以

我们在研究中发现的一件事

是,男性,尤其是白人男性

在被问到问题时可能会做出最快的反应。 开会,

所以他们可能会

在问题完成之前或

女性和少数族裔往往需要

更长的时间

并且有一点停顿之后立即举手,这并不

意味着他们知道你

实际上思考得更慢了

通常是

他们的意见被保持在更高的

标准,所以他们正在考虑更多的

因素,

所以我们在组织中推荐的事情之一是

你知道他们是否真的

想要每个工作人员的意见

在那里

,他们想利用多样化洞察力的力量,

我们

告诉他们暂停你知道的,

所以我们说问这个问题,

只是规定

没有人举手一分钟

或两分钟

,然后征求反馈,所以 这

是我们

建议组织真正

转移到

您所知道的远程环境的其中一个技巧,因为现在每个人都在

举行动物园会议,

它创造了一种新的竞争环境

让您知道,所以我们一直在接触

很多组织 关于

如何使您的缩放会议真正

具有包容性,

并且仍然确保

从每个人那里获得反馈,

并且在某些方面您知道,我认为对于

某些人

来说,感觉更具包容性,他们可以

知道在他们拥有的聊天窗口中写下他们的反馈

其他方式现在真正被

包括在内,

但我们也看到你知道

评估工作可能更难,

所以我们也在与许多

组织合作,研究如何让他们

绩效评估仍然有意义

,因为我想现在你知道

我们已经意识到这不会是

一周 这不会是

一个月 不幸的是,这已经

持续了很

长时间,所以我们正在努力 有了这个,

然后

老实说,对于他们中的很多人来说,

是他们

正在制定这些非常棒的 dei

包容策略,然后

大流行来了

,他们不得不停下来,他们

有点恐慌

,他们可能有一个不同的

组织

你知道他们会回到 2021 年

,所以我们真的只是在帮助他们

弄清楚我们如何让 dei 放在首位

改进

我很想放慢速度并解开

您分享的一些内容,

您描述

了在与组织合作开始时进行评估的重要性

,然后会有变化

浮出水面并且可以实施

通过

呃你提出的一些具体建议

,然后是

工作场所的实际进展情况,然后衡量

进展情况,

所以这有很多复杂性,

你可以引导我们

完成一个你开始的场景

看到这种变化

实际上扎根并扎根,然后

产生结果,如果有这样的例子

是的,是的,这是一个很好的问题,

所以我们的评估你知道我认为

每个人

在这一点上都有调查疲劳,我完全

理解为什么

嗯所以你知道 我们的评估确实

包括这项员工调查,

我们很自豪地说我们已经将

平均时间缩短到 14

分钟,

嗯,但该调查的

目的是

真正揭示

工作场所某些群体之间的这些差距和经验,

所以

这不是一个真正的典型员工

敬业度调查

我们不会问这些模糊不清的

问题,比如你认为你在

一个

公平的工作场所工作吗? 问一些问题,

比如你的经理是否问

过你

在过去 12 个月中的职业发展目标

,以查看我们的

国家数据为例,因为我们

在我们的网站上保持调查开放,只是为了

在我查看国家数据时保持基线

现在作为对这个问题的回答,

72% 的男性和 44% 的女性表示同意

,所以我们的员工调查确实

充满了诸如此类的问题,只是

询问你认识的人

是否曾与他们的高级经理交谈

过 被邀请参加

与业务相关的

事情的专业发展机会,这些事情是真正客观和

可跟踪的

,这些往往是我们

带给领导层的时刻,那是他们的

时刻,

你知道,所以这是

我们看到变化的第一个地方,你知道我们

谈论我们不做培训

,我们不做,但在很多方面

,数据的结果

最终成为他们自己的培训,

他们成为 l 的机会 领导者

要查看这些数据

并以真正切实的方式看到 好吧,

不同的群体

在我们的组织中经历了非常不同的经历

您知道我们进行了

这项员工调查

我们进行了流程审核,

当我们说审核时,这听起来像是一个可怕的词,

但这只是意味着我们询问联系人

您知道组织中的书面政策,您也知道 带薪

休假政策您是否

有哺乳室您是否有远程工作

您的招聘策略是什么

的然后我们暂停您知道我们

查看来自

员工的数据我们查看

来自人力资源的数据

等等 是的,我们会寻找

经验上的差距,但我们也会考虑

这两个故事之间的差距,

所以有时您知道人力资源代表会

告诉我们,

是的,我们有带薪休假政策,并且 n

他们的员工都没有这么

说,所以这往往是一个很好的

时刻,你知道这并不是

我们认为人力资源部在对我们撒谎,

而是很多时候像人力资源部一样投入了

所有这些工作来建立包容性的

政策和 他们只是没有被

有效地传达给组织,这

最终成为

组织发生变化的另一个时刻哦,

这就是为什么人们不高兴他们

实际上不知道这些事情存在

嗯他们实际上不知道 不知道我们付出了

这种努力

,然后你知道真正占用你的另一部分

你知道我们的大部分

工作都

以一种很好的方式看到有

善意的政策,

不幸的是没有

证据支持 没有

以正确的方式实施,我们研究了这些

政策,我们最终修改它们以

抵消偏见的影响你知道

我们最终

优化它们以抵消偏见的影响,

作为一个看起来像什么的例子 嗯

潘 el 面试就是一个常见的例子,

他们在 dei 对话中变得非常流行,

人们认为

可以 就

我们应该雇用谁提供了不同的见解

最终发生的事情 你知道

我们谈论河马效应

房间里薪水最高的人

嗯,如果他们在一起,那个小组中的每个人

都会默认

接受 最高薪或

小组中的主导者,

所以我们真的建议像拆分小组这样的组织

让小组中的每个

分别用

他们自己的问题集面试候选人

,然后我们帮助他们

了解其余的面试

评估 过程,因为正是这个

领域很容易产生我们的偏见,

无论我们是否愿意相信它,

你知道的方式

与性别种族无关 在这里,我们发现

,如果人们在下午面试候选人,

他们雇用他们的可能性低于

他们在早上面试的人,

所以这确实会

受到各个级别的设计的影响

,然后你知道我们看到了这些其他

变化,

我 认为组织可能永远不会听到

他们所产生的影响

,你知道的对我的影响

是,我们从

一个组织的员工那里听到

,我们正在认证该组织最终

扩大了他们的医疗保健以涵盖

依赖

,这是我们你知道的标准之一

我们查看他们的医疗保健的证明

,因此该员工写信给我们,

说她

现在能够离开

她一直处于的虐待关系,

因为她以前依靠

她的伴侣的医疗保健

来共同覆盖他们的孩子,现在

她没有 不必再在那里了,

因为她的雇主正在为我们提供服务

,所以她可以离开,

所以你知道我们看到的真正不可思议的

事情之一

这些变化的影响如何最终

延伸到办公室以外的人们的

日常生活中

听起来你看到人们

觉得如果他们做了任何事情,

那么他们很容易认为他们

做的一切都是

正确的,

一旦他们迈出了

第一步,问题就解决了

当你发现这种偏见

或瞄准一个新的状态时,可能更难继续寻找一个改变的

状态,

嗯,如果你提出一个非常具体的

问题,也许就像为他们的想法获得荣誉,

对女性和有色人种更

积极 由于

他们在组织中提出的想法而受到

赞誉,您能看到那种变化正在

发生,以及

当组织

在应得的地方充分而明确地给予赞誉时会是什么样子

是的,我想到的词是

其他人告诉我的,就像

我无法亲眼目睹,

但其他员工告诉我这是

充满活力的,

嗯,我认为最酷的事情之一

是它有 这对组织中的每个人都产生了影响

,他们最终获得了

创新的

回报,以及在工作场所提出新想法的真正令人振奋的回报,

因为

您终于收到了

已经在那里工作多年

但出于各种原因的人的来信 有一些

障碍阻止他们

听到 一些令人难以置信的新东西

,终于让你的想法被听到了,嗯,

你知道我被问了很多

,我们在工作场所看到的女性

和有色人种最常见的问题是什么

而且你通常知道这个问题

有点领先,并且有一个

序言就像哦,我敢打赌,你也看到了

一些非常可怕的我的事件,

嗯,我说你知道这些肯定会发生,

但我最常看到的

是这些阻碍

被采取 说真的,你知道我

是否可以把所有这些问题

放在一个桶里,

我认为它不会被

认真对待,而这实际上

是最有害的

五年来,

就像两件事都发生了

你知道我

在金融行业受到性骚扰

,我遇到过一种又一次的情况

,我被忽视了

,我知道这在很多方面

对我来说感觉更有害 在所有这些

工作中并没有受到伤害

,所以我认为对于很多女性

少数族裔来说,正是在这一刻,

她们迄今为止所做的所有工作

最终都

得到了尊重,我想你知道其中的

一部分 发生的变化是,我们得到了

这些关于领导

者与他们的员工联系并

说你知道

我们取回了这些数据的伟大故事,很抱歉,

到目前为止,我们还没有真正承认这一点

,领导者也承认我们。 重新站在

起跑线上,我认为

这是公司可以做的最令人印象深刻

的事情我认为这是

最终产生最大影响的

事情我理解为什么很多组织

不愿说

我们有问题你知道你的那

一刻 说

你有责任解决这个问题

嗯,但除此之外,员工只是

觉得年复一年他们没有被

听到

故事和知识

往往会真正转变组织中的能量

莎拉非常感谢你真的非常

感谢你抽出时间

克里斯谢谢你菲尔我很感激