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23/04/08 |

Workplace diversity

By Mark. Filed in Anecdotes, Culture.

Every month, the Australian Institute of Management publishes its magazine 'Management Today'. The back page (p56) of the May 2008 edition has some comments about diversity including the following anecdote:

"I had to ask for some time off for a family matter and I think my manager really resented it"

Compare this to an anecdote we recently collected from one of the companies we regularly work with:

"One of my fellow managers told me recently about one of their staff, their mother was in a unit that had flood damage and the mother was elderly and that person had to go and help the person strip out the carpets and do all the work. But she wanted a day off, so she had a day off. And then what happened was she needed to have more and more time off. My colleague said, look you need to sort out your family situation and we will sort out what you need to do with your work time. So as a result of that, that person got all the work done and then couple of weeks later did the extra hours, tied it all up, and got back on track. And that person who had the elderly mother in the unit was very much appreciated, that the flexibility was involved. That was very important to her. I felt good about that because there were no rules or guidelines but the manager made the decision and he got everything—the thing got done and everyone got a win-win situation out of it. It didn’t go to HR, he just organized it"

I know which organisation I would rather be part of. The article in Management Today states that effective diversity management means understanding and supporting both the obvious and less obvious aspects of our individual differences. Diversity is much more than a policy; it is an everyday activity that, if done well, can lead to more engaged staff and a positive impact on the bottom line.

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Comments

Great post Mark. One of the great challenges of a growing organisation I think is to employ the necessary governance for effective operation while at the same time remaining flexible such that the diversity you describe can be accommodated. One of the many reasons I have been with my organisation for almost 9 years is the flexibility they demonstrated about 7 years ago when I had 2 unplanned medical issues within 5 months that required multiple weeks off work. I felt valued by their actions and well...as I say, I'm still with the same company today.

Simon

Posted by: Simon at April 25, 2008 11:52 AM

Thanks for a great example Simon. Its interesting that some organisations don't see the very simple side of diversity and how daily interactions have a big impact on people's intent to stay and the extent to which they go above an beyond the call for their organisation (discretionary effort). IMHO, good governance is not so much about balancing economics and diversity, it is acting in ways that value diversity without necessarily being able to prove the financial benefits.

Posted by: Mark Schenk at April 26, 2008 9:03 PM

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