Why are Global Heads of Learning, Talent, and Leadership focussing on DEIB and what are they doing about it?

Employees should be more than satisfied, they should thrive. Increasingly, CxOs see their success with Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging (DEIB) as key to achieving that.

In 2022, 21% of the Global Heads of L&D, Talent Management, and Executive Development who attended iVentiv events selected DEIB as one of their priorities. This is one part of HR’s wide range of priorities, but more and more leaders in learning and talent are looking to make DEIB a key part of what makes them successful going forward. 

A diverse group of business leaders

Having a sense of belonging, the argument goes, is necessary to “create a global sense of belonging so everyone can thrive”. When employees have a clear sense purpose and a clear idea of how that aligns with values of the business and with their own personal goals, it lays the foundation for an effective company culture. 

For CxOs in HR, the challenge is that their teams want to feel valued by the business that employs them. It is important, therefore, for businesses to create a working environment where everyone feels respected by their colleagues, every contribution is recognised, and everyone can express their ideas in a healthy and inclusive space. 

But culture is just one part of the conversation. To have a truly successful working environment, HR leaders are saying, a business needs to have “diversity in our talent pools” with a variety of different skills and cultures. By creating an environment that really values inclusion, every individual can showcase their full range of talents and contribute to “the strategy and business outcomes”. 

Is business culture the foundation of DEIB? 

Social exclusion, made worse by poor economic performance and lower participation, hinders business growth and limits markets. Now, more than ever, leaders are focusing on attracting and retaining customers and employees to deliver and sustain overall business success. 

In businesses that are open and ambitious in their approach to diversity, HR and Talent leaders increasingly feel they are widening their talent pool. Along with measures to improve equity, their expectation is that they can deliver better outcomes. As a result, they argue, the organisation reaps the rewards in the form of a “foundation of capability and benchstrength, allowing for more talent agility and innovation.”

But they also see a need to focus on giving the organisation a coherent ethos, where their values are represented by employees, who in turn create inclusive cultures. Part of the problem that leaders are facing up to is the variety of subcultures within a business. Each CxO and each manager creates their own culture. The challenge is to turn each of them into disciples for the business.

Steven Bartlett (Entrepreneur, Speaker, Investor and BBC Dragon) describes exactly this challenge when he discusses the importance of expressing business values through his team. In a recent video, he describes two managers with contrasting leadership mentalities, where the most successful manager will communicate and promote the overall business culture. By reinforcing the business’s core values, his best managers highlight the overall business culture, promote productivity, and minimise negative actions, therefore leading to a more harmonious workforce. 

How can L&D use technology and training to promote DEIB?

Once the culture has been established, HR teams are working to promote inclusion and belonging. Leaders, they say, should consider whether the business is hearing and celebrating everyone’s voice at all leadership levels. By allowing everyone to contribute their own gifts in their own ways, so the theory goes, you create true psychological safety. CxOs implement inclusion, giving their teams a sense of belonging that will ultimately lead to real, sustainable diversity that make a difference to company performance. 

When the Heads of Learning, Talent, and Leadership that attend iVentiv events selected their top priorities in 2022, DEIB was the fifth most popular, suggesting it is a key topic, but not one where CxO’s have all the answers. The conversation is very much ongoing and CxOs are still looking for advice to help them identify best practices to overcome this particular challenge. 

CxOs are also interested in how the use of technology can support their work on diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging. Ahead of a recent iVentiv session, one CLO submitted a question asking how L&D teams were implementing “tech, when rolled out with a global lens, [that] recognises different cultural practices and language barriers to ensure effectiveness of training across the globe”. Chief Learning Officers are realising that, in order to maximise the values of their LMS’s and LXPs, those systems have to be adaptable across “different language constraints, time zones, [and] cultures”, reinforcing consistent business values across a diverse workforce. 

To achieve that inclusivity, businesses are adopting systems and technologies that are more accessible, from any location. Those systems can be adapted to local languages and ways of working, but without losing the consistent principles that make the company unique. 

In addition, CxOs are incorporating the topic of DEIB into formal training, alongside management training and team building in order to “embed Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in the way leaders/managers hire, develop, lead and promote people”. As a result, they say, staff are more aware of the company’s DEIB objectives and get greater exposure to a wider range of ideas. This comes in the form of specific awareness-raising programmes as well as making DEIB a core component of onboarding.

How has hybrid working impacted the way that CxOs think about inclusivity? 

The global pandemic has hit businesses hard, drastically changing working habits. Organisations have had to adapt to restrictions and cultural changes in line with legislation. Now that countries are easing out of restrictions, for the most part it looks clear that hybrid working is here to stay. 

In a recent interview with iVentiv, Uli Heizlhofer (Senior Director, People Learning and Development, Lyft) explains how hybrid working can support inclusivity. For his organisation, Lyft, hybrid working has given the business flexibility without reducing performance. Productivity and innovation still remain high. The key, he says, is trust. By having the right leadership in place, with managers setting clear expectations and goals, the workforce stays productive. It means they don’t have to rely on the Talent that lives within commuting distance of their offices. Instead, they can attract new recruits on a national and international level. 

This is just one of the examples of some of the trending topics which CxOs are discussing at iVentiv events. Whether your discipline is within Learning, Leadership or Talent, joining an iVentiv session allows you to connect with like-minded leaders who are facing the same challenges as yourself. 

This blog draws on data and insights from the iVentiv Pulse Annual Report, based on survey responses from Global Heads of Learning, Talent, and Leadership. Download the full report here and find out more about iVentiv’s events for senior executives, exclusive to CxOs. More than half the Forbes Global 2000 companies have attended an iVentiv event, with an all-time average event satisfaction score of 92%

Thumbnail: 
News category: 
Latest Trends in Learning
DEIB
Talent Management
Leadership and Executive Development
Learning & Development

More Insights

Ahead of his session on hybrid working and exclusivity at iVentiv's Learning Futures California in 2022, Uli Heitzlhofer, Director of People Learning & Development at Lyft, gives a preview of the topics he plans to cover in this short interview.

Uli discussed the pivot to a hybrid model of work and the opportunities and challenges that presents for leadership, for new employees, and for the business. Read more and watch the full interview with Uli to hear about how Lyft made the transition to a fully hybrid model.

Matt Smith is an Executive Coach, Leadership Advisory, and former Chief Learning Officer at McKinsey & Company. Speaking to iVentiv's Temi B, Matt discussed the habits that make a successful learner, techniques for developing intentional learning, plus ideas to help CLOs work with business leaders. For Chief Learning Officers, these are perennial questions, but Matt says they are tractable ones as well. To find out more about Matt's tips for creating a culture of intentional learning, read and watch the full interview.

iVentiv events are all about community and collaboration. By bringing together senior executives from global companies to share knowledge, iVentiv provides the platform for you to connect with peers in the same roles and take away new ideas that make a real business impact. Over the years, we have been very fortunate to bring that conversation to some of the world's most iconic corporate venues.

Corporate hosts enhance the iVentiv experience by providing inspiring spaces to connect and develop. A fresh environment and a different business culture helps participants think about their challenges in new ways. In short, hosts inspire the iVentiv community to experiment, innovate, and do more. Find out more about hosting iVentiv here.

Events, conferences, expos, seminars. Whatever you want to call them. Attending is one of the best ways to meet decision-makers in big companies and do some networking, whether that's Chief Learning Officers, Heads of Talent, or Executive Development leaders.

But there are a lot of events out there, and making the most of them is tough. To get started, read iVentiv's top ten tips for networking with decision-makers at events and conferences.

Leadership is about so much more than KPIs and performance.

Derek Bruce has recently joined DSM as Global Lead, Performance Management and Learning Strategy. In this interview with iVentiv, he talks about the skills that leaders need in 2022 to make sure they can support individuals in the way they bring themselves to work. He talks about mindfulness, succession development, and especially purpose. These are the skills that Derek says are going to be especially important going forward, and in the full interview he gives his advice on how to go about it.

On 1 December 2021, Theresa Cook, EMEA Talent Development Head for TikTok and ByteDance, and her team attended a Town Hall where they were told that the talent development global function was being made redundant. "Now, in any organisation that is quite a shock," Theresa recalls, "however, in a startup organisation, which I did sign up for, I also knew that these are the kind of things that might potentially happen." Find out more about how Theresa lept into action.

Skills, reskilling and upskilling are high on the CLO agenda right now. Peter Sheppard is Head of Global L&D Ecosystem at Ericsson. In this video, he talks about how to demonstrate the value of skills in your organisation and how to tie your reskilling efforts to key business goals. Watch and read the full interview here.

In the first of iVentiv's 'Five minutes with' series, Charles Jennings, Co-Founder of the 70:20:10 Institute and a member of the iVentiv Advisory Board, spoke about the key skills and challenges that CLOs need to focus on right now. Charles shares his insights and ideas on how CLOs can build communities to manage change. Watch the full video to find out more.

Gorana Sandric is the former Head of Group Talent Development for the Coca-Cola Hellenic Bottling Company and a HR Leadership Development Consultant and Executive Coach. In this blog, she reflects on some of her main takeaways from iVentiv's Talent Management Europe Virtual Knowledge Exchange. Read the full blog to find out more.

Pages