In many ways, lack of workforce diversity has become a self-fulfilling prophecy. Whether it is due to women taking time off to raise children, the lack of opportunity in different functions, or general bias, dynamics exist that create an imbalance. I was struck by insights from a Pew Research Center survey, which showed that women were twice as likely as men to say there was discrimination in the workforce. Equal pay for equal performance plays a big role in that perspective with one-in-four employed women saying they have earned less than a man doing the same job while just 5 percent of men said the same.
This trend disturbs me as I think about it as the CEO of a public company as well as in my role as a father of two bright and accomplished daughters and husband to my tremendously smart and capable wife.
It also disturbs me because I believe that diversity is a must to drive innovation. A recent study published in Harvard Business Review found a statistically significant relationship between diversity and innovation. The innovative companies are those with fresher product portfolios, and, according to this study, turn out to be more profitable. This serves as a proof point for the need of a robust and proactive diversity and inclusion plan. A diverse culture can help guard against group think, increase the scale of new insights and identify the right employees who can tackle a company’s most pressing problems.
To create change, the process must start at the top. At Ritchie Bros., we aspire to create a workforce with diversity of people and diversity of thought, thus creating exponential innovation for our customers and employees around the world. With this in mind, we have greatly enhanced gender diversity in recent years, especially considering that we are in the business of heavy equipment serving the construction, agriculture and transportation sectors, which have historically been male dominated. Since I took over as CEO, we’ve added women to key leadership roles including our CFO, CITO and SVP of Marketing. Today, nearly 21 percent of our directors and VP levels are female (it used to be 7 percent). It becomes easier to drive gender diversity when we have women in a broad set of senior management roles and leadership positions.
But the work doesn’t stop there, it must cascade and infiltrate the organization far and wide. Here are just some of the ways executives can take on this challenge of gender diversity and better season their workforce blend:
Leaders cannot look at the gender diversity or pay gap issue in isolation. Robust, proactive diversity and inclusion programs can pave the way for a culture of innovation and create opportunity for all. Having a commitment to providing an environment where all employees are treated with fairness and respect and have equal access to opportunities for advancement based on merit, skills and aptitude is the path forward. It starts at the top, but it must cascade, with consistency, throughout the organization to stir the pot and create a flavorful stew that is the catalyst for long-term change.
Related: ELI CEO Stephen Paskoff On Creating A Values-Driven Culture
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