Diversity Training and
Microinequities: Ensuring All Voices Are Valued
May 19, 2004 - Emily Hollis |
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Imagine you’re on a project team, working on upgrading
the organization’s technology infrastructure. In meetings,
you find you are often interrupted—you feel your voice
isn’t heard. You receive an e-mail about the project, and
notice you’ve been left off of an e-mail chain that goes
back weeks to the rest of the team. Then you notice the entire
team has gone for lunch without you. You feel excluded, devalued.
You are experiencing the impact of microinequities.
According to Brigid Moynahan, founder
of the Next Level, a leadership training firm, micro-inequities
are the small, subtle behaviors that devalue other people. “What’s the
difference between rude behavior and micro-inequities?” she
asked. “They become microinequities when it happens consistently
enough to start really walling the person out. They’re
subtle, and they’re often semiconscious, which makes them
unbelievably powerful because we often don’t know why we’re
feeling that the climate we’re in is cold or we’re
feeling demotivated, or we’re feeling like we don’t
have any creativity. We’re developing attitude problems,
and we don’t know that what’s happening are subtle
discounts that are building up inside and making us feel like
we don’t have value.”
The term “microinequities” was originally coined
by Mary Rowe , now ombudsperson and adjunct professor of Negotiation
and Conflict Management at the MIT Sloan School of Management.
She began her work on the subject in 1973, when she said she
expected to find that the chief concerns in the workplace for
people of color and for women would be big things—pension
plans, dependent care support, etc. “Of course, those things
all do matter, but I also heard from a great many visitors to
my office about apparently little things—the kinds of things
you could not take to a grievance procedure, and you maybe weren’t
sure it even had happened,” Rowe said. “The classic
example was having one’s name left off a list or a supervisor
that would go around the room giving out assignments who skipped
the one nontraditional person in the room.”
After collecting hundreds of examples
of such incidents, Rowe said she began to imagine hypotheses
about how together, these behaviors could damage people’s
goals and undermine their self-confidence. She collected them
in a paper, which she revised numerous times. The first paper
was written in 1973, but first published in 1991, she said.
While they are small and subtle behaviors,
microinequities can have a macro impact on the business. Rowe
said, “Theoretically
speaking, a businessperson wants to organize a meritocracy so
that people get rewarded for excellence. Favoritism obviously
distorts a meritocracy, and micro-harassment, micro-aggressions
and microinequities are a negative distortion. Anytime a very
good person is deflected or loses confidence or decides to leave
or is just undermined, then, theoretically speaking, the business
may lose.”
Moynahan said microinequities can have
a number of business impacts. For organizations with diversity
initiatives in place, there may be a lack of understanding
of what is driving their diverse workforce to leave. “As human beings, we don’t
really know how to value difference; we know how to reject it,” Moynahan
said. “And we do it not by overt acts of discrimination,
but by the subtle stuff that we may not even be conscious we’re
doing. I just forget him or interrupt her, and it happens consistently
enough so that it undermines the effort to value difference,
and organizations are spending billions in this diversity industry
to get people to start valuing each other, but our daily behaviors
want to devalue and exclude—very subtly, but we do it all
the time.”
These behaviors can have a major impact
on productivity, Moynahan added. “If I do not feel that I’m being a valuable
contributor, I’m going to stop coming up with ideas. I’m
going to stop taking the risks. I’m going to stop giving
my all,” she said. “In fact, the worst-case scenario
is I’m just going to be taking up space.”
Learning executives are in the key position
to stop microinequities from undermining their organizations’ goals. Companies
like Chubb, JPMorgan Chase, Shell Oil and Johnson & Johnson
have made microinequities training a central part of their diversity
initiatives.
The first thing learning executives need
to be aware of is that this is a human behavior, Moynahan said. “We’re
not going to stop this stuff, but we have to understand the power
of the impact of it and take responsibility to try to reduce
it because of what it does to an organization,” she said. “But
it will never go away because as human beings we’re going
to continue to create insiders and outsiders.”
The key is awareness. “Remember that the phenomenon,
if you believe it’s there, is subjective in its being,
so it’s very hard to prove that anything ameliorates the
problem of microinequities,” Rowe said. “But that
said, lots of very good organizations have worked hard at this,
partly by naming the phenomenon so that people will be on the
lookout for it, and partly by setting up structures where people
can talk with each other about what they see, either so they
can act effectively on the spot or support each other after the
fact.”
Part of acting effectively is taking
a positive, valuing approach, rather than a negative approach,
which can bring on defensiveness. “I
have a program called ‘Count Me In,’ which says it’s
also important to talk about the valuing behaviors we want to
use with each other—not just the devaluing behaviors,” Moynahan
said. For example, instead of pointing out to a colleague that
he has interrupted a co-worker, you might suggest that the co-worker
had a good point that no one heard yet and ask her to repeat
it.
Learning to be a good bystander is vital. “When we do
training, what matters?” Rowe asked. “I think it
matters to teach us all how to be effective bystanders and peers.
I think it’s helpful to learn how to interrupt unacceptable
behavior, to role-model appropriate behavior rather than accuse
people.”
Moynahan added that it begins with effective
leadership. “Everyone
is watching the leader to see who’s in and who’s
out,” she said. “We want to know that—we look
for it. The minute we see it, we start playing that game. So
if the leader microinequitizes somebody and doesn’t value,
then other people will stop listening to that person too.”

© 2005-2008 The Next Level, Inc. All rights
reserved.
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