Deloitte Uk Dei and Elevating Employee Experience Feb2023
Deloitte Uk Dei and Elevating Employee Experience Feb2023
Deloitte Uk Dei and Elevating Employee Experience Feb2023
Experience through
Diversity, Equity, and
Inclusion
February 2023
Elevating Employee Experience through Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion | Introduction
Introduction
Employee Experience (EX) is informed by six core relational
attributes an employee interacts with – the work they do, the
places they work in, the diverse people they work with, the
technology they use, the organisation they work for, and their
personal well-being and inclusion. EX has become a mainstream
focus, but organisations are still struggling to capitalise on the
benefits. Deloitte's Employee Experience and Emerging
Technology team use human-centred design to understand the
voice of the employee and ensure they are put at the heart of any
organisational transformation. To attract and retain employees in
a competitive and unpredictable market, employers need to think,
design, and deliver experiences that are ‘human’.
Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) has always have been accompanied by shifting employee
mattered, but events in the past few years expectations, resulting in calls for organisations
have resulted in organisations undergoing to adapt to a flexible work setup, demonstrate
unprecedented challenges and has brought DEI corporate social responsibility, and commit to
front of mind for leaders and employees alike. becoming a diverse and inclusive organisation1 2.
World events such as the murder of George Floyd
that sparked a global social movement, to the Employees of today have the power to impact
disproportionate effect of COVID-19 on individuals brands and have more work choices than ever.
from ethnic minorities and low socioeconomic Organisations are increasingly recognising that
backgrounds, have emphasised the social injustice diversity and inclusion improve the feeling of
that still exists within our society. Alongside these belonging for individuals and lead to equity for
societal events, changes in legislation are pushing all.3 Therefore, a focus on DEI cannot be taken
organisations to be more transparent around DEI as just a ‘tick-box exercise’ for organisations, but
issues, for example, the requirement to publish fundamentally embedded in an organisation’s DNA
reports on the gender pay gap. These changes as it’s the right thing to do.
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Elevating Employee Experience through Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion | Introduction
Equity: all employees having the support and access to resources they need to be successful, alongside the removal of barriers that prevent
the participation of certain communities
Inclusion: embracing different identities, allowing everyone to feel welcome and valued4
To truly embed DEI, organisations must consider these components as a collective to ensure cohesive strategies and initiatives. For example,
increasing recruitment of women and ethnic minorities may increase representation within the workforce, but if these individuals are not
offered the same opportunities as others, or are not embraced through the organisational culture, then organisations will ultimately fail in
their DEI agenda. This is because although it may superficially be viewed as a success from an external perspective, fundamentally it is still
flawed internally.
Prioritising DEI is essential for organisations to ensure everyone has equal opportunities to join, develop, grow, and feel valued in the
organisation. This will result in creating an enhanced experience for all employees, regardless of their identity, and result in improved
performance for the organisation.
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Elevating Employee Experience through Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion | How should DEI be incorporated across the employee lifecycle?
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Elevating Employee Experience through Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion | How should DEI be incorporated across the employee lifecycle?
The onboarding experience is a pivotal movement for new joiners to gain their first real impression of the organisation they are joining. To
ensure a successful onboarding experience, it is key that new joiners are made to feel welcomed and valued, even prior to their first day. This
can be achieved by personalised welcome messages from leadership, being invited to join diversity employee resource groups (ERGs), and
importantly, ensuring the new joiner’s manager and team are ready to welcome them on day 1. Demonstrating an organisation’s commitment
to DEI from the start ensures new hires understand the organisational values and behaviour they are expected to exhibit. It is equally
important to equip managers with appropriate training on how to enable an inclusive onboarding experience for new hires, as a huge part of
a new hires’ experience relies on their manager’s commitment to support and enable their development.
NVIDIA uses a language bias decoder tool that has resulted in Deloitte use a plug-in to their Talent Acquisition tech stack that
the number of women applying for jobs increase by 28 per helps them to understand the achievements of candidates
cent . By using this tool, NVIDIA has been able to minimise
10
within the socioeconomic context they have grown up in.
language in their job adverts that might be gendered, exhibit Since introducing the new technology in 2015, they have hired
age bias or be discriminatory to certain groups. This has helped between 300-400 candidates that would have otherwise not
ensure their job adverts are inclusive. passed the initial application stage.
Case study
In conjunction with Makers Academy, Deloitte has launched a return-to-work digital skills retraining program for people returning to
work after a career break. It is specifically designed for those without software experience to help upskill them in high-growth areas.
Deloitte has hired more than 70 per cent of shortlisted applicants from the Makers Academy, highlighting the success of the campaign.
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Elevating Employee Experience through Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion | How should DEI be incorporated across the employee lifecycle?
Reward is another key facet organisations must be cognisant of to drive equity. The pay gap refers to a measure of the difference between
the average pay rates for men and women, and for ethnic minority and non-ethnic minority employees in an organisation.11 Pay gap reporting
is an important strand of a wider diversity and inclusion agenda and in recent years, there has been a commitment to increase transparency
over reporting and ultimately minimising the pay gap, ensuring that employees are rewarded fairly, regardless of ethnicity or gender. By
not only measuring pay gaps but setting targets, organisations can create a culture of accountability as they navigate toward greater pay
parity. Pay gaps can be tackled through a variety of channels, starting with reviewing the end-to-end career development and performance
management process.
Another strategy organisations can adopt to strengthen their diversity and inclusion practices is to develop well-defined, clearly
communicated career paths. When an organisation documents its career paths and the necessary skills required to advance and importantly
makes this information transparent to all, there is less room for racial or gender bias in promotion decisions. Clear documentation of
pathways can also help to mitigate the unequal distribution of information and ensure that the responsibility of providing this guidance
does not rest solely with managers12. Indeed some organisations are even developing diversity promotion targets to ensure a percentage
of internal promotions come from candidates from under-represented groups. For example, DLA Piper has committed to half of all future
internal partner promotions coming from under-represented groups13. Many organisations have diversity targets at the board level,
however not limiting this to the board and embedding it across levels can be a useful tool in creating more diverse and inclusive experiences
across the talent lifecycle. Other measures include investment in inclusive leadership programs to develop talent from groups typically
underrepresented at the senior level.
Promoting fairness, inclusivity and transparent career development pathways are fundamental to achieving an elevated employee experience
in a changing world of work, where employees expect greater career mobility, flexibility, and autonomy than ever before. For organisations
who want to capitalise on their employee experience, strengthen retention, and compete in the increasingly competitive ‘war on talent’, career
development is a critical stage to address in the employee lifecycle.
Case study
Deloitte has taken the lead on voluntarily reporting on the gender pay gap since 2015 and the ethnicity pay gap since 2017. Recognising
that both the gender and ethnicity pay gaps are driven by a lower female and ethnic minority representation at senior grades, Deloitte
is consciously supporting the career development and progression of women and ethnic minority colleagues. In 2021 Deloitte launched
its Emerging Leaders Programme (ELP) to support the leadership pathway Black and ethnic minority colleagues, which welcomed a
cohort of 166 participants. As a result, Deloitte has seen improvements within senior grades during 2021, as ethnic minority partner
grade representation rose from 6 per cent to 7 per cent, alongside a similar increase at director grade from 11 per cent to 12 per cent.
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Elevating Employee Experience through Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion | How should DEI be incorporated across the employee lifecycle?
Reasons for an extended absence from work can vary from parental
leave to life-changing events, illness, mental health challenges, or
caregiver demands. Ensuring a smooth return to work is essential
for organisations that wish to embed inclusion into the fabric of their
workforce practices. This can be challenging for organisations to
achieve, for example, when returning from maternity leave, common
pitfalls include having a lack of options that allow a phased return to
work and lackluster onboarding processes. A knock-on effect means
that women who have a negative experience when returning to work
are 63 per cent more likely to leave the company.15
Following the COVID-19 pandemic and the escalation of flexible/remote working, work-life balance for working parents became essential.
Flexible working enabled them to spend more time on family needs, however, the lines between work and life blurred. Working parents
switched roles of being a teacher for their kids, providing caregiving responsibilities while managing executive asks. This negatively impacted
their work-life balance and well-being. While it’s important to note that childcare/family responsibilities do not sit solely with mothers,
at present the burden does disproportionately fall to women. Therefore, organisations can adopt return-to-work strategies that include
childcare support through partnerships with off-site providers and childcare centres to promote a better
work-life balance.
An eCommerce website has started extremely comprehensive Whilst providing all standard and expected parental leave
childcare and working parents support policies. In addition, the benefits, Apple Inc now additionally include family-oriented
company also offers “gender-blind” parental leave. Through this medical services in their healthcare plan – including fertility
benefit, all employees of the company, regardless of gender, are treatments for all their employees17 18.
entitled to 26 weeks of leave . 16
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Elevating Employee Experience through Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion |How can organisations approach DEI?
What to ask:
• What does DEI mean to your organisation?
• What do you want the end-to-end experiences for all employees, regardless of role or identity, to look like?
• Who will be your key stakeholders to buy in and support this change?
What to do:
• Step 1: Define and understand the priority issues in your organisation using data – where is representation the lowest? Where is there bias
and inequity?
• Step 2: Understand what areas matter most to employees – where is the experience least inclusive? What are some of the quick fixes?
Where should the longer-term strategic focus be?
• Step 3: Build a business case and work towards implementing the change – who will own, champion, and drive this work forward? How can
you embed an inclusive culture?
• Step 4: Operationalise and implement the plan – test concepts with key user segments, receive feedback, and iterate to deliver on the plan
• Step 5: Leverage metrics to enable continuous improvement – have you been successful in your DEI goals? Do you have a continuous
feedback loop to understand success and areas for improvement?
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Elevating Employee Experience through Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion | Summary Brochure / report title goes here |
Section title goes here
Summary:
The road to truly embed DEI is a long and continuous one that will bring
benefits to employees and employers alike. The key to its success is
not considering it as a tick-box exercise but consciously focusing on
embedding it across the entirety of the employee lifecycle. Focusing on
DEI within your organization can elevate Employee Experience.
When
organisations
truly understand
and value their
employees, they
can unlock their
potential.
09 09
Elevating Employee Experience through Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion | Authors
Authors
Richard Evans leads Deloitte UK’s Employee Experience and Digital HR practice. He specialises within complex technology
enabled change programmes in Human Capital Management and HR Information Systems Strategy. He has extensive experience
in both strategic and delivery focussed roles. He has performed a variety of HR transformation engagements including multiple
full project lifecycles for global clients across many industry groups.
Natasha Rizk is Deloitte UK’s Employee Experience Lead. She specialises in supporting clients to design unique, holistic, and
differentiating experiences for their workforce. She collaborates with organisations to adopt an employee-centric mindset
throughout their transformation journey, going beyond technology to increase employee loyalty, positively impact customer
outcomes and unlock productivity. Her career spans both time in industry and consulting, during which she has supported global,
cross-industry clients with complex transformational programmes across Human Capital and HR strategy.
Lottie Rugeroni is a Manager in the Employee Experience & Emerging Technologies practice, with experience on a wide variety
of HR / People Transformation projects, focusing on Employee Experience. She has a core focus on human-centered design
methodologies to ensure that employees are listened to and brought on the transformational journey.
Naina Sabherwal is a Senior Consultant in the Deloitte UK Human Capital practice, where she helps clients assess, strategise,
design, and implement employee experience-led solutions for clients. Her passion for enhancing the human experience, coupled
with her diverse experience in Human Resources Transformation projects, constantly propels her to deliver true business value
for clients.
Holly Miller is a Senior Consultant in the Deloitte UK Human Capital practice and has experience working across large HR
Transformation projects, leveraging digital solutions to optimise processes and improve the employee experience, with a
particular focus on Talent Acquisition and DEI outcomes.
Amara Amadi is a Consultant in the Deloitte UK Human Capital practice and sits within the Employee Experience and Emerging
Technologies team. Her experience is largely focused on delivering HR technology and transformation programmes with a focus
on employee experience-led design.
Berman Zhigalko is a Consultant in Deloitte UK Human Capital practice and specialises in Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Advisory
Services. His experience includes analysing private and public sector organisations current talent-related practices and designing
future long-term DEI strategies.
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Elevating Employee Experience through Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion |Endnotes
Endnotes
1 Striving for Balance, Advocating for Change, Deloitte, 2022
3 The racial equity imperative: The need for business to take bold actions now, Deloitte, 2021.
4 Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) 101, Deloitte LLP and Internal Audit Foundation, 2022. See also https://www2.deloitte.com/content/
dam/Deloitte/us/Documents/risk/us-risk-dei-internal-audit-operations-sense-of-belonging-at-work.pdf
5 How Diverse Leadership Teams Boost Innovation, Boston Consulting Group, 2018
7 The diversity and inclusion revolution: Eight powerful truths, Deloitte, 2018
8 What Job Seekers Really Think About Your Diversity and Inclusion Stats, Glassdoor, 2021
9 Gender bias in job ads: how jobs ads reinforce the gender pay gap, Adzuna, 2019
10 NVIDIA chalks up major hiring gains to augmented writing technology, Textio, 2018. See also https://textio.com/blog/nvidia-chalks-up-
major-hiring-gains-to-augmented-writing-technology/13035166529
11 RSM: Diversity Pay Gap Reporting, Kirkhope et al, 2021. See also https://www.rsmuk.com/who-we-are/diversity-reports#Pay%20gap
12 How Clear Paths Strengthen Retention – and Diversity, Bain & Company, 2021. See also https://www.bain.com/insights/how-clear-career-
paths-strengthen-retention-and-diversity/
13 Diversity and Inclusion: Types of Company Goals for D&I, Barbour, 2020 25 Examples of Awesome Diversity Goals | Ongig Blog
14 How Performance Management can foster diversity and inclusion, Maresch B, 2019. See also https://www.small-improvements.com/blog/
performance-management-diversity-and-inclusion/#:~:text=%20How%20performance%20management%20can%20foster%20diversity%20
and,for%20inclusive%20behaviors%20to%20spread%20across...%20More%20
15 The Great Return: ensuring work really works for new mothers and our industry, Bloom, 2021
17 “This is an independent publication and has not been authorized, sponsored, or otherwise approved by Apple Inc.”
11
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