Bias Impacts:: How Culture and Diversity Affects the Leadership Journey
By Kanthi Ford and Patrick Ricketts
()
About this ebook
In this roller coaster of global business change, it has become practically impossible to manage the way we once did. Now is the time to embrace new ways of leading that encourage diversity, equity, and inclusion and help people thrive in an endlessly changing environment.
With the goal of helping current and future leaders discover new routes to future success, seasoned executives and business coaches, Kanthi Ford and Patrick Ricketts, share insight into their own diverse professional experiences as well as simple, common-sense concepts that are fundamental to leading effectively in today’s workplace. They provide reflective questions that offer a space to consider situations in a different light, and suggest actions that may help shift behaviors or understand the perspectives of others. Ford and Ricketts examine issues created by unconscious bias, explore the role of an empathic leader, discuss internal cultures and ways to manage uncertainty, highlight their experiences with systemic racism, and much more.
Bias Impacts is a guide to help leaders learn how to be more inclusive and less biased, to lead through change and attain positive results by taking intentional action to manage differently.
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Bias Impacts: - Kanthi Ford
© 2023 Kanthi Ford and Patrick Ricketts. All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.
Published by AuthorHouse 06/02/2023
ISBN: 979-8-8230-8166-5 (sc)
ISBN: 979-8-8230-8167-2 (hc)
ISBN: 979-8-8230-8168-9 (e)
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Getty Images are models,
and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Getty Images.
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in
this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views
expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
Contents
About the Book and the Authors
How to Get the Most Value
Preface
Why Now?
Chapter 1 People (Who Are) like Them
Chapter 2 Be Mindful You Treat People Right
Chapter 3 Does Activism Reinforce Bias?
Chapter 4 Streets or Establishment?
Chapter 5 Speaking Up? Is It Worth Losing Your Job For?
Chapter 6 Making Relationships Work
Chapter 7 Changing People’s Views
Conclusion
About the Book and the Authors
In 2020 and 2021, the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic combined with globalisation and information technology disruption has given rise to the most radical reinvention of the working environment since the Industrial Revolution. The time of the hierarchical organisation that was male dominated, with autocratic leadership styles, is well and truly moving on.
The concepts underpinning diversity, equity, and inclusion are used extensively in business circles. The impacts of some these unconscious biases are rather more intangible. So, this book was written by our two authors, Kanthi Ford and Patrick Ricketts, to open a window and provide some insights into some workplace realities.
Kanthi and Patrick are both company directors. They met at an online directors’ forum during the pandemic. They were musing about the fact that most people at the session were typical of workplaces they had encountered – all white and predominantly male. Then it occurred to them that by sharing their lived experiences, they might provide some understanding of the challenges that people like them encounter through unconscious bias. Kanthi is a leadership and business development coach, so it was decided to frame their personal experiences in becoming company directors, placing these stories within the context of developing leaders who are more aware and so able to transform their organisations to be truly diverse, equitable, and inclusive.
We would recommend this easy read to anyone who is curious about the impact of their decisions on the people around them. The book draws heavily on the individual experiences of the authors as they journey through their careers. Kanthi Ford has been a company director for twenty years. She has worked in television, advertising, and organisational restructuring. More recently, she has been working as a strategic consultant and business executive coach advising companies on cultural transformation.
Patrick Ricketts started his career as an apprentice toolmaker qualifying as a bench fitter designing and making press tools. He moved on to production management in the manufacturing sector before moving to the service sector then subsequently to the construction sector. Today, he is an accomplished director who has spent twenty-five years in commercial and operational leadership roles restructuring businesses for sustainable growth in the UK and working across Ireland and Northern Europe.
How to Get the Most Value
In this roller coaster of global business change, nobody can manage the way they did before the 2020 coronavirus pandemic and the emergence of the Black Lives Matter movement. Now is the time to embrace new ways of leading, new ways to encourage diversity, equity, and inclusion, while encouraging innovation, in the workforce, new ways to help people thrive in an endlessly changing environment, new ways to create a high-performing business. The disintegration of traditional hierarchies has now become inevitable. Our aim is to help you in discovering new routes to future success.
The following chapters will lead you through many simple, common-sense concepts that are fundamental to leading in a diverse, equitable, and inclusive workplace. They are equally critical for you on a personal basis whether at work or at home. Sprinkled throughout are questions which may help you consider your situation in a different light and suggested actions which may help you in shifting your behaviours or understanding the perspectives of those whom you lead.
This book will enable you to understand more about yourself, your style, and how to deal with and influence other people. You can learn how to be more inclusive and less biased. You can learn how to lead through change and get more results. We suggest you read the following materials in short segments and take the time to reflect in between. Use it as a tool to expand your leadership knowledge. Learn ways to apply some diversity, equity, and inclusion concepts to your personal life. Maybe share it with your team and use it as a tool for discussion. Either way, this book will be an investment in your personal growth and development. The dividends will be considerable.
Culture and Diversity:
How Bias Affects the
Journey to the Top
Preface
It was a sunny morning as the last vestiges of winter were being replaced by spring sunshine, with all its implicit hopefulness, a Tuesday in March, the kind of day that makes people hopeful for new beginnings. I was going to a meeting with the head of HR to discuss my contract renewal. I had been working with this television company for six months. I needed to understand what the future path would be.
The meeting had unwound – the stuttering start, cursory greetings, the necessary preamble, my request for a future route map. Then came the two startling comments that were to hold a mirror up to my life and seed my destiny:
We hired you to look good for diversity.
The best way to get to the top in this business is to sleep your way there. I can suggest one or two people that may be able to help.
The memory of that encounter has stayed with me throughout my career. When I entered that office, I was in my first career job since I had finished my university degree – but there was scant attention paid to political correctness, let alone individual respect. Human resources were perceived as a function of administration and logistics rather than the science of talent management and people protocol. Yet imagine my shock at the statements!
My background, and the way that I was wired, meant that I was determined to achieve success without taking his advice. It left me feeling vulnerable and quite traumatised. Yet I dismissed him as misguided and was determined to prove him wrong. Success did arrive eventually.
Years later, I was running a leadership workshop with young engineers at a conference focussed on equality and diversity in the energy sector. When I shared this story, the audible gasp in the room demonstrated just how much the business world has moved on since that fateful meeting at the end of seventies.
Each day’s news comes to us rife with such reports revealing lack of respect, implicit and explicit racism, the disintegration of the older orders, an onslaught of view and counterview, well-meaning intention running amok. But the news simply reflects to us, on a larger scale, a creeping sense of massive change. Meanwhile, businesses and governments call out for political correctness, increased unconscious-bias trainings, and diversity and inclusion quotas.
This book talks of ethnic diversity and to a lesser extent gender differences in the workplace. It is a compilation of lived experiences to provide insights or make sense of the senseless. It shares discussions between Ella NilaKanthi Ford (a part-Asian woman) and Patrick Ricketts (UK-second-generation Jamaican). We met as directors of different organisations, and during many a conversation, we came to believe that our personal experiences might shine a light for today’s decision-makers. During the process of writing this book, we also travelled personal journeys of discovery and insight.
Why Now?
The last decade has seen a stream of scientific studies on emotion and bias. Studies of the brain have, for the first time, made visible how we think, feel, and respond. This type of data enables us to understand how the deep-seated wiring of the brain channels us, for better or worse.
This information is also coupled with extensive research into the management of organisational culture, combined with an understanding of national cultures. It will help to inform organisational decision-makers as they move forward.
Our Journeys
In this book, we serve as guides, two very different people, with inside knowledge acquired on our journeys, through two unconnected careers from school to board. It is our lived learnings. We would like to believe it will provide our personal insights into ethnic diversity and male/female gender issues. This will help you to lead organisations with greater awareness of diversity, equity, and inclusion. It will also provide you with a way to put yourself in someone else’s shoes.
The journey’s end is to understand what it means to be a person from an ethnic minority or a woman in business, or both, and how to encourage genuine equality at the board level. Our journey in seven chapters begins with a description of our employment experiences throughout our careers and opens a window on the unconscious barriers to career progression. We discuss unconscious bias and the way the brain functions when experiencing moments of the unknown or of difference. We reveal how much our instinctive responses can undermine best intentions. Most importantly, we suggest simple steps for shaping future interactions.
We take you through several discussions that build on this. We hope it will provide a clearer understanding of the challenges faced by ethnic minorities and women in the workplace whilst embracing the differences they can bring in leadership roles. It also provides you with some tips as to how you can nurture this talent and grow personally.
Chapter 1, ‘People (Who Are) Like Them’, examines the issues created by unconscious bias and describes some of the pitfalls experienced in companies recruiting people of a similar appearance and gender. It asks you what you would do differently and reviews some aspects that may be a barrier to be an inclusive board member. We talk about the changing business environment and the shifting role of leaders. We provide various doors and windows through which you can look to re-evaluate yourself as a leader rather than a boss.
Chapter 2 helps you explore your role as an empathic leader. It suggests things that you can do to engage more effectively with your peers, team members, and colleagues. It introduces the concept of the shadow you cast as a leader and how you can leverage it for maximum effect.
Chapter 3 debates the question ‘Does Activism Reinforce Bias?’ In this chapter, we discuss company cultures and managing uncertainty as well as our evolving views on activism, together with our experiences of tokenism in the context of our careers. Whilst we would like to explore company culture and societal influences, we believe that is a subject for others. Hopefully, by examining some aspects of corporate culture, we can start to understand the bigger societal picture, but, first, let’s explore activism.
In chapter 4, ‘Streets or Establishment?’ we explore the need for vision, both for individual development as well as for changes in business and in society. We also highlight our personal experiences of systemic racism in the community and in education in the hope that evidence like this may identify the barriers facing some young people and point to the resources that can be used to overcome these difficulties.
Chapter 5, ‘Is Speaking Up Worth Losing Your Job For?’ considers the appropriateness of standing up for personal values. When do you start to say, ‘No, this is not acceptable behaviour,’ and start standing up for what is right? When do you start to own the situation and take accountability for some of the outcomes? What are some of the changes needed in leadership teams and organisational cultures that will create a springboard for the shifts in behaviour necessary to give everyone the confidence to speak up and build accountability?
Relationships are the touchstone for chapter 6. We explore some basic principles of personal style and personality. We then provide some tools to consider how you might interact with all the diversity of people in your life.
Chapter 7 encapsulates the original purpose of this book – to change people’s views on diversity, equity, and inclusion. It brings the reader up to date with recent experiences described. It also touches on some key behaviours necessary for you to develop psychologically safe environments for others. It concludes with a summary of the book. Most important, it provocatively challenges the reader to take action to do things differently and become an authentic leader who embraces diversity, equity, and inclusion.
CHAPTER 1
People (Who Are) like Them
This chapter provides the personal points of view of our authors as recipients of personal bias and how we were affected. It then goes on to explore unconscious bias and what it really means for a leader today. We ask what you would do differently and review some aspects that may be barriers to being an inclusive board member. We talk about the changing business environment and the shifting role of leaders. We provide various doors and windows through which you can look to re-evaluate yourself as a leader rather than a boss.
How the New Order Affects Leadership
Today there is increasing focus on businesses which are diverse, equitable, and inclusive (D, E, and I) in culture. Companies are encouraged to have policies which will underpin this shift in organisational culture so that everyone is included in an equitable fashion and diversity is embraced not avoided. This is the new order in brief.
As a reader, you may be aware of diversity, equity, and inclusion and