Ethnicity pay gap reporting
Ethnicity pay gap reporting and what it means for organisations
Ethnicity pay gap reporting and what it means for organisations
In the second session of our Anti-racism stays on the agenda webinar series, our panel of experts debate the need for transparent ethnicity pay gap reporting and offer tips on how organisations can best collect, analyse and use employee data on race.
Our panel of experts include:
Chaired by Katie Jacobs, Senior Stakeholder Lead, CIPD
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afternoon everybody i can see that uh more people are kind of joining the virtual room
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but i'll get started so we can kick off on time and get through the introductions and
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housekeeping as as people continue to join thanks everybody for joining us today my
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name is katie jacobs from the cipd and i'm delighted to welcome you to the second in this webinar series
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that we hope will help you as people professionals continue to tackle racism in the workplace and
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help you to keep anti-racism on the business agenda even as our news cycle continues to move on a
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bit so hopefully some of you watched our previous series on racism and the challenges for hr
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if you missed that please do go back and watch it because it really was a fantastic series loads
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of great stuff in there you can find it on the cipd website in our first session of this new series
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we covered how the people profession could go about obtaining long-term leadership commitment
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to anti-racism work and embed genuine cultural change in this session we are switching our
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attention to public policy and in particular ethnicity pay reporting joining me to discuss this
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topic delighted that we have a really stellar panel so we've got dr doyan atawalogan she's a
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chartered business psychologist an expert in leadership inclusion and intersectionality
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and newly appointed dean of the rhodes scholarships at rhodes trust we've got baroness ruby
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mcgregor smith she's a noted business leader president of the british chamber of
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commerce and author of the influential race in the workplace and the mcgregor smith review
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which recommended that companies be compelled to publish ethnicity pay data that was a few years ago so we can
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discuss what if anything has changed and last but not least uh peter cheese
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chief executive of the cipd who i expect that all of us know by now so i will say
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needs no fuller introduction than that thank you so much for joining us today as ever i'm just gonna run
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through our very quick housekeeping notes this session is being recorded you will be able to access it afterwards
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um to submit questions and please do submit questions because we want this to be as interactive as possible
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please use the q a tab which you can see at the bottom of your screen use q a tab for questions you want
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directed to the panel but i would encourage you to use the chat function to speak to and connect
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with each other it's always really great to see the chat afterwards and the kind of comments that have been made and the
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connections have been made on there so i would encourage you to to comment as we go along um on anything you hear that you find
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interesting and to a little bit of connection with each other the cipd has developed a new hub
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on our website dedicated to tackling racism in the workplace we're adding resources to that all the
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time so do check it out i want to flag our well-being helpline
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for members in the uk and ireland with award-winning workplace well-being provider health assured
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we are now providing cipd members with free help and support via sessions with qualified therapists
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online or over the phone and finally i wanted to flag our reward management survey
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which this year includes questions on the impacts of the black lives matter movement on reward strategy
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please do fill that out if you're responsible for having influence over reward strategy in your organizations
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and you can find that by our various social media channels so that's enough of the housekeeping
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onto the topic at hand according to 2019 data from the bank of
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england people from ethnic minority backgrounds earn about 10 less in the uk than their white
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counterparts we also know that those from ethnic minorities find it harder to achieve
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senior leadership positions only 1.5 percent of leadership positions in the uk
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are held by black people for instance currently according to business in the community
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only 11 companies are voluntarily capturing their ethnicity pay gap data
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is mandatory ethnicity pay reporting one lever to achieving racial equality in uk
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workplaces what would its introduction mean for organizations and what are the other public policy
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leavers we could pull to improve racial equality in uk workplaces that's the kind of thing we're going to
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be discussing this afternoon please do get your questions and comments in but first off i'd like to ask each of
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our panel to introduce themselves a bit more fully and offer some opening thoughts on the current context racial inclusion
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in uk workplaces and where change is most solely needed so um ruby could i ask you to start kick
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us off good morning everyone it's real pleasure to be here today i
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as in 2017 did a review on races in the workplace so my
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recommendations clearly laid out a number of things that businesses could do to improve the
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participation of individuals from a minority of a minority background
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we all know in business that there are a very very small number of levers you can ultimately pull
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when you want real change we also know therefore that in order to get real change we have to start with data
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and understand where we are today so my review called very heavily for publishing ethnicity paid cap data
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in some way shape or form and we know since then the gender pay gap data has started
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a different set of conversations and organizations it also called for aspirational targets
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it also called for sponsorship and another and a number of other measures but i think certainly my big message is until
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we do what i recommended and what others have recommended in many reviews over the year and we start taking action things just
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won't change thank you thank you
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thanks katie good afternoon everyone um like katie said my background is in
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leadership inclusion and diversity and i've also been since its inception
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academic advisor to the park review and in reflecting for today i
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thought as part of my opening remarks i should share a few ideas with regards
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to thinking about the value of the practice of mandatory ethnic
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paid gap reporting i say let's focus on the practice because i think it's very easy for us to
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think policy and to separate ourselves from that as individuals we might hear that
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as managers leaders um people working in teams and think you
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know what with regards to ethnicity pay gap reporting that's something for the government
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that's something for industry leaders and it's not necessarily something that i can see myself
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working in i think the other advantage of paying attention to
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mandatory ethnicity pay gap reporting is whether or not you're making progress in it
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it has the benefit of helping us focus on the system so in addition to um the
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potential risk of disconnecting from policy i think just the concept of having
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mandatory ethnicity pay gap reporting makes it real by turning us to
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attend to the systems in which we find ourselves and giving us particular goals to work
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on and what i wanted to do in this time was to share a few examples so just by way of
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context satin we know that a historical perspective
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on present-day inequalities uh tells us that we are immersed in a hierarchical
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system in which uh institutions were originally
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created and favored particular types of people with status privilege and power and we
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know today that management and senior level positions are in some ways
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protected with regards to their access to wealth quality education and career
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trajectories so we know that those positions have been duly compensated
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and protected as a result of historical inequalities that context helps us have a systemic
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view on pay disparity but in order to make it real to make it personal
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the concept of mandatory ethnic uh pay gap reporting quantifies it and that we know from the
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psychology research helps us make this goal achievable goals facilitate a
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disciplined approach to change goals give us interim milestones
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goals give us a sense of urgency we know that just having a quantifiable
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data point is an extremely effective way for organizational and
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and so at one level i ask um our audience to think you know what yeah
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you might think this is not something i can actually kind of focus on right now with regards to my power
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um but having the conversation and aspiring to figures gives you an insight into where you want
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to get to i also want to advocate um a personal
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perspective on this because like i said senior leaders have a um have a personal
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uh role in in actually working towards reducing pay gaps and so
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we know for example and we can probably discuss this more in the discussion that
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for example processes such as mentoring and sponsorship they happen all the time they happen
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informally we know that it's important in order to get senior level talent
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that we you know we need to engage in in mentoring and sponsorship and so there are questions i would ask
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of senior leaders and listening on the call with regards to the effort
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they put in to sponsor back advocate to put their neck on the line
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for people who don't look like them for higher grades and for lucrative projects
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and so i just offer some of these thoughts to say yes it's important absolutely for us to
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think about mandatory ethnicity pay gap reporting as policy but i also very much want to
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introduce the conversation around each listener on this call having a role to play in this
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i'm very happy to expeciate further as the discussion continues thank you so much thank you diane and
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over to you peter yeah thank you katie and uh good
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afternoon to everybody first of all real pleasure to have ruby and doing on this uh conversation
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they bring a lot of credibility a lot of insight to this this whole discussion and to to begin with katie's thoughts i
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think there's no doubt in our mind and we've been i think quite uh strong on this as society that
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now is the time for real action on on more fairness more transparency around
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ethnicity we talked about diversity and inclusion all this aspect for a very long time and so that is a central pillar
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of good and responsible business to show what they're doing to create inclusive cultures and workplaces for all
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and of course ethnicity has been one of those more challenging ones and there's no doubt that with the killing of george
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floyd that that has accelerated the anger and concern among so many about the lack of progress
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in action in creating fairer more inclusive workplaces for people of ethnic minorities
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so we we have also come out and said that not only been involved in the government consultations and ethnic pay gap
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reporting but in supporting the work that came out of ruby's review but also that we we really do want to
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encourage this to now move forward into more legislation but i think there are some real
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challenges as well there's no doubt about if we go back to gender pay gap reporting i mean what we found is you think
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that's probably a simpler thing to do in some ways there was still a reaction from i thought too many organizations saying
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oh this sounds rather complicated and how we're going to do it and and my reaction at the time often was well
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isn't this something we should have been doing anyway ethnic pay gap reporting definitely has additional levels of
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complexity on it um and understanding what is meant within the different categories and how far we
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go with understanding different ethnic groups within our organizations is part of that debate but i think also
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as dyan has touched on there's no doubt that regulation and policy can take you some way and as ruby said i think
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both the gender pay gap and ethnic pagan reporting it puts it more clearly on the agenda it makes business leaders pay attention
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to it it makes external stakeholders pay more attention to this stuff including investors in business
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but it is not sufficient of its own and even with gender pay gap we found that arguably too many organizations seeing
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as a compliance issue and i'll give you for instance as to why that might be the case if you're reporting a number with no narrative
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and no action plan related to it then you're rather left with the conclusion as an external reader that you're just ticking a compliance
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box and we know in order to drive these agendas it's a lot more than that it is how you shift
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your cultures and all those other things so alongside any kind of pay gap reporting we also need to see
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more transparency on action plans the narrative behind what organizations
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understand from the data because at the end of the day use another aphorism data is only as
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good as what you understand it to be so in other words it's the insights that you drive from it and that
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would be something that we've been emphasizing both for gender pay gain reporting but we certainly be emphasizing and calling for more
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in policy terms is more need for organizations to give narrative and action plans about what they understand
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with pay gaps on what they're going to do about it but as i said i think it is also this link into the wider transparency of
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organizations on a number of dimensions to show how we're truly tackling inclusion in all its aspects culturally
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and otherwise within our organizations thank you peter thanks all of you for those um great introductions
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um i wanted to start by digging into the why a little bit and then we can go on to the on to the how um so ruby um you
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mentioned that monetary pay reporting was something you recommended pretty strongly in the
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review could you explain a little bit about why you think it matters so much
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i recall when i did my review in 2017 we wrote to the ftse 100 and asked them to explain what their breakdown of
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employees was by pay and by background and of the companies that responded
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which 84 did only 49 actually have meaningful data on their workforces
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and i think that challenge in its own right is that if you actually don't know
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that you know the the issues around pay in the workplace you've never analyzed
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it then how can you ever do anything about it and when we took a look at the data that
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was submitted we found that pretty much across every sector in the ftse
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that did respond that if you were of a minority background and you were
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working for the organization you might get promoted once or maybe twice
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but you certainly didn't get promoted any more than that and after after about two levels of
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promotions the numbers started to fall off a cliff and when you take a look across the
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footsie there are so few people at the senior level of a bain background and until you
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understand why and until you measure it i think it's incredibly difficult
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to put a plan of action around it because you can say you know we can change we can we can
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run unconscious bias training we can we can tell everyone to behave differently we can tell everyone to we
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can look at our recruitment processes we can look at all these things but you need to know if you're having
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any success and if there's going to be any breakthrough in your numbers particularly i think when you take a look around the country
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for many organizations particularly if your city if you're employing people from some of our larger cities
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with birmingham say you have an ethnicity a number say of over 50 percent of uh is being of their uh of their
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population you just don't see that as seeing your levels of business and in birmingham alone and you sort of
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go what what's stopping that and so i think unless we do it and and clearly i've
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recommended everyone to sign up very much the race at work charter that's been launched by business community which and every organization that does
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has committed to publishing their ethnicity pay gap but until you do
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and until the government chooses to legislate um we're never going to know our starting point and
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we're just going to keep talking about theory and not action is my view and given like that was back in a few
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years ago so 49 less than half of the of the footsie 100 were reporting anything and doing any
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thoughts on why is it just put in the too difficult box or is it because it's a sense of something that we don't value is
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important yeah yeah that there is often a there's a fear there's a fear linked to name and
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ethnicity so many more of this of us know this now um lack of race
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confidence poor race fluency a desire for colorblindness while you know kind of denying these um
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differential outcomes within your organization as well as more broadly in society so i mean i am
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encouraged and and i hope uh peter and baroness ruby are as well
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by recent um events which at least give us a little bit more of a permission to use the r word um so i think there's
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a little bit more confidence and there's there's some momentum to um draw on that and you know recently
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the um at the signatures uh asking for mandatory ethnic pay gap
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reporting you know they jumped quite a bit and got to over a hundred thousand now and i'm sure that's um very closely
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linked to a black lives matter so there is a fear but that is easing and uh you know i really want to
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kind of reinforce what baroness ruby said where we we say like there's something around
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there's a power in sitting down and having to be faced with the numbers um there is
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something in humanity in terms of you know how we're wired that gives us a drive that gives us a
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goal and really if that's just that the one thing that or you know there is some indicator of
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progress that we want to make for those reasons um i would say it's certainly worth um uh engaging in
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in that practice and for for many good reasons but at that basic level it gives us an an impetus thank you
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and peter do you think it's something that you see our profession so the people profession pushing and being open to that is uh as
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you said it is a lot of businesses for you it's quite challenging yeah i think it's a it's nice question how much our profession is is pushing
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this enough if i'm honest i mean that because we've all acknowledged the progress has been very slow i mean 11
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we're not even at a tipping point and i think you know business they look to each other then in so many
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different ways and if they could see a majority of organizations reporting on this clearly that they would feel the
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obligations do the same so i think it's a combination of effects i think that is one how do you get to the
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tipping point and i think we're all saying that to get to that tipping point you've really got to push this into the more mandatory space i think
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there's also an honest truth which is as we've all touched on the visibility that organizations have
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had the ethnic makeup of their organizations has been lacking for far too long um and as i said if organizations were
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feeling a bit challenged and getting the data around gender pay gap then it's a lot harder and ethnic pay gap and one of the
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indicators that i look for is is that so the first thing is you've got to know what the ethnicity of your
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people are and you're going to ask them now even that question is not straightforward i mean there are different ways you can define it people
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worry about just a general categorization of fame because that doesn't tell you enough and some people
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and it doesn't tell you enough is the honest truth and some people don't even like those sorts of designations but the
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point is is that if you do not understand it and or if you ask your people and they're not prepared to tell you their ethnic
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um background then that tells you something else it tells you that the people in the organization don't even particularly
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want to talk about this so and i think the sad truth is there are many organizations still in that
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kind of place so the organization saying well it's difficult to get the data and that's the reason why i might resist it
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when actually what it's pointed to is your shared difficulty in getting the data is pointing to some other
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things the people are not feeling safe in your organization to talk openly about race so i think we're all in in the same
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place we've been on this for a while we're going to have to push harder um i think the government will
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introduce more management reporting on this almost certainly and that is going to be a challenge and
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we should be prepared as a profession for that to happen we should be on top of this data and if we're finding our
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people on willing to share their ethnicity then we've got to dig into that and understand why and address those issues
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alongside it with them thank you and mentioning that they're pretty sure that the government has appetite to
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introduce this um ruby any insight on if you think this is going to come in as mandatory especially given uh
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all the other stuff that government businesses are dealing with right now i think it will at some stage i don't
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know when i don't think they they've really said very much about when all their thoughts
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and clearly in this current environment i think there's some initial focuses
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that which which mean that this is not high up the list but it's so important and i also think we
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should think really clearly that once we're through this pandemic in whatever shape or form we are
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as businesses start to rebuild out of where they are today and clearly many
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are challenged it's a good time for them to think about it and think about what they can introduce so you can start to build back
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different forms of businesses and you build this into the structures you start to grow again because one of
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my concerns is is there's never a right time in the middle of a pandemic many would argue is not the right time
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but i think as we start to come out of it it needs to be on the list of things to do
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thank you and doing any any thoughts on that and it becoming mandatory something you see in the near future oh hopefully
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i will optimistic about it yeah but katie can i come in on one of the
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questions that's been raised in the chat i don't know whether it was in response to one of the comments i made
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about um uh i think it was dorothy i might have missed the first name saying my life isn't a
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tick box um you know isn't one for tick boxing and i just wanted to clarify that when i
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was saying that this is something that spurs people into action it really wasn't that at all it wasn't
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it there's no expectation that this is tick box actually it's a kick-start internal data and um just one
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illustration of that um you also uh commented on my work and intersectionality
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so uh one organization i worked with a little while ago was looking at a version
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of ethnicity pay gap reporting and they noticed that uh broadly speaking
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that there wasn't as much of an ethnicity bay gap as they expected between
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uh white employees and black employees um they looked at me
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there wasn't too much of a mix there wasn't too much of diversity disparity and they looked at black and
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there wasn't that much of a disparity and then from an intersectional perspective they sliced it
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by gender as well so they broke uh they looked at their data on white
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men and women and looked at their data on black men and women and they realized that what was
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distorting the pay gap was there was a number of black men who
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were in london and very highly paid so what was happening when you we asked
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a number of different questions of the data was a number of black men for their grade were on really high
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salaries but the white men in that grade didn't stay as long at that level
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were promoted much more quickly and so what that particular inquiry
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revealed to this organization was there was an indication potentially that black men's careers
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would be installed through bonus and extra pay and white men were flying through their
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careers and so i just use this as an illustration to say when we take mandatory ethnic pay gap reporting
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seriously and we add if we want to an intersectional lens it actually gives us additional data to
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pinpoint where some of our challenges might lie that's a really great example i think that ties into
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what peter said his opening comments about not enough to just kind of slap a number on it but really interrogate the data
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look at the stories that it's telling you and put forward a proper action plan
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um got some questions coming through i'm gonna park them for now but i will come to them shortly so please do continue to
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get them in and don't do that thing where you all put them in a 25 past one and then i can't answer anything
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last little bit you're you need to mute this yeah how did that happen
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that's one of my colleagues who's in the background so sorry about sorry about that um i i wanted to ask um
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before i move on to some audience questions about the comparison between um what we've seen happening with gender
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pay gap reporting and ethnicity pay gap reporting so um ruby any reflections on how that's
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kind of changed the the game do you think it's raised a level of conversation at board level
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i think it has i think what happens now is that when you talk about the gender pay gap it's a board level question and before
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we had the gender pay gap yes we talked we've been talking about women for a long long time but no one's talked about shutting you
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know closing down pay gaps and that's the big issue we've all got
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on race as well so it's going to take time to close the gender pay gap
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but it's not about saying everything needs to be done today because because it can't this may take many many years to start
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really changing and every organization has to do what's right for them but i think it has started a proper set
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of conversations on the journey to pay gap not just for boards but also for employees because you've got to
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start to question why some of these pay gaps are so high you know for some industries you would expect them to be high because of
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history because of the way um because of the way the workflow force has always been structured
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but that first that changes it isn't about being critical it's about saying look we can do this because it's the
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right thing to do and economically it's the right thing to do for organizations and and for the and
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for the government so therefore let's put in the measures that will really really help and
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and you know when we talk about women it then leads on to that conversation about does that mean more flexibility
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does it mean more mentoring does it mean more sponsorship do we have to remember that if there are no senior women in our organization
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um that that culturally that may not be working too what do we
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need to do about that but it but the conversations start and then action plans start to get developed and
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that has to be the route we take with ethnicity pay gap as well and peter any thoughts on how you've
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seen kind of the conversation around gender pay gap change and specifically around narrative and action plan
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yeah i'd echo what ruby said i think it has changed the narrative and discussion uh as you said with boards with investors
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with other stakeholders you know prospective employees start to look at this kind of data of an organization saying
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what is what's the story telling me and as i said i think transparency in all these dimensions of workforce is so
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important it's incredible when you think back over the history of corporate reporting where there's been so
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little transparency in any aspect of workforce and yet these are the things that respective employees want to see they're
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also the lead indicators i mean let's not forget the context of this this is about inclusive
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responsible businesses who are open to recruiting all of the people that they need they're broadening their mindsets
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reflecting their customer base and all these other things and as we said reflecting the communities which
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they're part of and yet we've done such a bad job in reporting so much of this so i
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think gender pay gap was a very strong signal from government that they are going to start to take this stuff more seriously
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as i said i think it's been picked up by investors amongst others in this wider debate what's known as esg so
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environmental social governance questions and and i think also during all this lockdown we've seen
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so many organizations saying this is putting people the front and center of the agenda so the now really is a time to progress
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this but we need to so what are the lessons we've also learned from gender pay gap and as i said i think the number one
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well the two points are which which we've already made to some degree one is yes it's put it more on the agenda but
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secondly we have got to get deeper in our understanding of what the number says and what is our story behind it what's
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our action plan that that leads it and i can see a comment on on the chat line about does hr as a profession need
30:53
to up its game in terms of analytics and the answer is yes and we are doing a lot of the cipd's do that because it
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isn't just the broad data it's what other insights is it telling you and finally i'd make an example because
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when you see a big gender pay gap and i think it's true also the ethnicity stuff when you see a big gap thing oh my
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goodness this is terrible so i'm probably going to hide it or try to write some story about it whereas actually the first thing is to
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understand what it is and if you're in an organization let's say gender which has a very high number
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of uh people joining in the lower ranks as women so insane the fashion industry
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then it's going to take a long long time and you could take some pretty abnormal actions to try to fix it in the short
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term if that's what you think you need to do so for example hiring loads of young men into an organization which is
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predominantly in an industry which of course is going to attract women so lots of complexities of that nature
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which is why we need to get the insight to back it up and i think what we've learned from gender pay gap
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is we still got some work to do even on that before we get to ethnic pay gap reporting as well thank you
31:58
i just want to read out a comment which is uh back to back to dawn about the point you were making about tick boxing
32:04
um that the uh the attendee wasn't disagreeing with you just saying that as a woman of color i'm tired of being used
32:10
to satisfy quotas or satisfy tick boxes with very little being done to promote change or
32:15
rearrange the landscape for me or other black people in the workforce it needs to move beyond talk to policies sorry from talking
32:22
policies and onto action which i think is what we were saying um so i want to come on a little bit to kind
32:28
of how you how you do it because that's what a lot of the questions some from practitioners are are coming in and doing would a kind of
32:35
would an fsd pay gap report look identical as a calculation to
32:40
agenda pay get one or their different ways of doing it how would you advise that it's done i um broadly speaking that the the
32:48
steps would be similar just a couple of challenges which we've already kind of hinted
32:54
at um one of the things which we'll come back to i'm sure is about categorization
32:59
and self-identification so i'll come back to that um but once we have the data around
33:04
categorization and or self-identification is a significant plea to break bain down into
33:13
different categories black asia bame black asian minority ethnics i
33:18
put um bail in air quotes because i know um not everyone identifies with that
33:24
term um so one of the ways in which it is a little bit more complicated
33:29
is um we have many more debates about ethnic identification um today
33:37
relative to um different gender identities and i don't want to this is not about one versus the other
33:44
um but there's something about really tuning into for example the fact that chinese men
33:50
earn very differently to bangladeshi woman for example um just to go back to the
33:55
question of self-identification and categorization i know there have been a couple of comments around that
34:00
uh broadly speaking knowing that this is an ongoing process so regular reminders
34:08
quarterly reminders um rather than uh there was someone who talked about launching an initiative in
34:13
in january that i saw in the q a in the chat this is an a long game like i think
34:19
we've mentioned once or twice already so the um the organizations where i've
34:24
seen the self-identification numbers go up they have engaged in an ongoing campaign they have
34:30
been really clear on why they need this data they have really been really clear on the relationship between the
34:37
organizational values and strategy and why they are asking people to self-identify report on their adversity
34:44
and they have um communicated progress so this is what we're doing this is why we're doing this is why it's important
34:50
this is how we're using your data and repeat and repeat um some listeners might be
34:57
familiar with a particular report i'm just going to highlight it because it's a really good case study in it by
35:03
uh nationwide um so the black british business awards uh did the middle research which i led a
35:10
few years ago i think it's 2017. if you just google the black british business awards and the middle research
35:17
the study will come up and there's a case study towards the end that talks about how nationwide went up
35:23
from something like um below 20 to something like above 70
35:29
following some of these steps thank you and ruby can i ask you to add on that and maybe reflect on those businesses
35:36
that you've said are doing it voluntarily by the bitc um commitment there what what is working
35:41
in terms of the how how are they how are they reporting look i think we have to accept that it's a
35:46
difficult thing to report on particularly if you don't have that many people self-declaring but i
35:52
take of you that you've got to work with the data you've got so i will you know i when i when i was
35:57
running my tea we had 83 1 compliance and that was fine you know my
36:04
view was let's report on the numbers you've got and gradually you'll build it as people get to trust it more and clearly i can see why some people
36:10
would be uncomfortable and ask well why do we need to do this but it's to my point until we've got
36:16
data we can't do anything and and i think it's going to be different for different organizations
36:22
but i think there is a tendency to over complicate it because people don't want to do things until it's perfect it's not
36:28
going to be perfect the gender pay gap reporting is difficult enough right that was
36:35
difficult enough to put in place there's been lots of imperfections and even doing that this is going to be difficult
36:42
but it shouldn't stop people doing it i also think if people start to do it voluntarily
36:47
even with huge numbers of caveats about their data at least it's a starting point now i know that one of the issues is
36:53
going to be that a lot of people won't want to publish it because they'll go well hang on data's really bad well everyone's data
37:00
is really bad we just accept it's all bad and that no one's going to look good coming out of this
37:06
and that isn't the point the point is how do we change where we are when we know it's really poor
37:12
and just accept it's going to be pretty dire and then it's how you build on it and the
37:17
more i think you you look at it and you can the thing is is whatever you're going to report in year one
37:23
you can change the way you report in future years you don't think it's good enough it's not that we have to be wedded to
37:29
the number of people the different backgrounds only this sub group this year i think it gets over
37:34
complicated it just would be good to report something whatever it is and even if boards and organizations
37:40
start to change it a year or two later so be it and if you take a look at those that have they're
37:45
all doing it differently they've all got different interpretations i'm not bothered about that because every industry might argue it's
37:52
right and we shouldn't be going for some kind of global amazing you know this is how we do it
37:58
because it will be different by industry it will be different by those that go into different industries i mean i had a
38:04
great conversation with the big four accounting firms where they told me we didn't really have many issues from say the asian community
38:11
and i said well you know i can speak for that because i did chartered accountancy it was something i was really pushed into as a profession
38:18
i said you know that that and a lot lots of my family were also pushed into it as into a profession
38:24
but they knew about it and they thought it could open some doors um the reality is is but you will have a
38:30
challenge with some other individuals for being background who wouldn't consider that a they could go and join you and b
38:37
that you would support them so and there's only say for example one of the big fours only got one black
38:42
partner so let's be honest about this there are so many different ways of looking at it but
38:47
you've got to go with what you know and expect to change each year and let's
38:53
not get too theoretical we just need to report something and how do you get over we had a few people
38:58
asking about um the fear factor that so maybe people aren't reporting because they're scared of what they'll find or
39:04
they're worried about looking bad and do you think just put it out there and deal with it yes of course there are all of that's
39:10
true let's be really honest about this why would anyone want to report something
39:15
that doesn't look great okay that's fine it's not going to look great we all need to get over that we
39:21
can't solve this unless we're prepared to deal with that one point and the idea that everyone goes no we
39:26
can't publish full data or work for a few more years to make things better and then we'll publish it when it's good
39:33
won't achieve a thing we need to publish data as our starting point
39:38
and then and we all know what gets measured gets dealt with in business it's as simple as that um and the mere
39:44
idea that we're going to go around in circles or nice soft initiatives was i
39:49
said in 2017 we kind of done all of that and we need to stop doing it and we need
39:54
to stop being unnerved by what it's going to look like um
40:00
and and i also feel that although employees may be unnerved by it and you
40:06
know do we do do we push for it push for it because at the end of the day until we start
40:12
talking about this in organizations and talk about the data and talk about what we're going to do and start to talk
40:18
about race which clearly so many people still feel uncomfortable about talking about until we do
40:24
all those things nothing will change and we'll still be having webinars in a decade saying exactly the same
40:30
thing and i'm not sure we all want to be on them in a decade with our progress
40:36
thank you really great call to action there about being brave and just to flag a few people asking in the chat about this and the source that doing quoted
40:42
and we put that in the in the chat now um peter i know you mentioned this earlier but we've had quite a few questions about
40:47
disclosure um and how have you got any advice on how to kind of get that get that disclosure up because
40:54
a lot of people feel that they just don't know enough about their employees in the first place yeah i mean i think
41:01
dawn made some very important points on this and energy druid as well first of all the data would never be
41:06
100 accurate i think one of my indicators has said is how many people are prepared to answer
41:12
the question and there could be various reasons why they may not and the worst being that they're just simply not comfortable exposing
41:18
or talking about it because the organization's not comfortable talking about race but it could also be these other things
41:24
and then a couple of people i see a comment on it if you just keep asking me the same damn question i keep filling in the same data
41:29
request and nothing changes why would i keep doing it so i think this is so important we've got to show that the
41:35
data won't be perfect but we're using it for these reasons and then demonstrate the action that you're taking as a result which also
41:41
brings us back to the points we've all made which is about having insight and the narrative behind it and
41:46
and i agree with you i i don't think the date will ever be perfect what worries me a little bit and i think we saw it even with gender pay
41:53
gap is we don't want to give a license for people to massage numbers i mean there was a great series of articles when the gender pay
41:59
gap first came out in the ft because some organizations had started to report a zero mean and median difference in their
42:07
gender pay and the ft in a very ft kind of way said look just for the avoidance of doubt this is
42:14
how you calculate a mean and this is how you calculate a median and the fact that those two numbers could be the same thing and particularly
42:20
zero in their languages highly unlikely so but we have the means to challenge right
42:26
i mean if organizations put out stuff that doesn't look realistic we have the means to challenge them uh
42:33
the employees can challenge them which is why i'm really keen on this sort of multi-stakeholder i do modern business
42:38
which says so we should all have some voice in this and of course it's not just a regulatory thing it's
42:44
investors and financial stakeholders it's employees and prospective employees there's customers and others all saying
42:49
to organizations well you think you're doing a great job your data seems to sell this you're not telling the
42:54
story straight so i think it's part of a wider shift that we've got to have in a more open debate about all these aspects
43:01
of responsible business of which regulatory and policy reporting were all agreeing his part key and ruby i
43:08
think you wanted to make a point there as well i i just think we know that we're going to get low levels of
43:15
self-deflect declaration to begin with we're going to get organizations making
43:20
themselves look better than they are in some cases we're going to get those that just put it all out there and go
43:26
it's too you know we're going to get a whole mixture but until we do it we're never going to know what we're going to
43:32
get so we need to do it and then every year we can start to go well that
43:38
didn't work we can change it and we'll get better but until we do i don't think
43:43
any organization has the right narrative to say you know you can't say we're an equal
43:49
opportunities employer that we provide the opportunities for everyone equally
43:55
when we already know the gender pay gap in some organizations is truly appalling the ethnicity pay gap
44:00
will be let alone when we get onto the challenges around disability and other challenges in the workplace
44:06
it's just it's not equal it's not even but because we can't decipher it
44:11
we can't put interventions in place that work and so it's not just about data it's about
44:17
the entire management of what you're prepared to do with the subject and i just think you can be really
44:24
authentic about this stand up and go we'll publish it even if it looks dire we'll put in some action plans and
44:30
report against them and hold ourselves to account we'll expect our investors to hold us to account we'll change our incentive
44:36
plans to hold us to account we are serious about it and i think employees would be over the moon
44:42
that was a you know that was a group of people that wanted to do it but at the moment all the stuff we've done so far clearly
44:48
doesn't work okay all the nice words all the you know we'll mentor we'll do it it
44:56
just isn't gonna cut through so we do the serious stuff first we need to do all those other things as well
45:02
but we need to have a plan based around data at the heart of it that says
45:09
this is where we are and this is where we're going to get to and if that's going to take us a decade
45:14
it may take us a decade but honesty would be a really good thing and um i think for you ruby and also if you
45:21
don't maybe i'll come to you first what appetite do you see from the senior leaders that you work with to
45:27
to be brave and to because this is a senior leader agenda we're talking about a kind of exec board
45:34
agenda here so i'm enjoying what appetite do you see to be brave and to go for it not not enough
45:41
not enough um as uh baroness ruby was speaking i was thinking about the work
45:46
we did for the frc as part of the parker review this year and we looked at myself and a number of
45:53
colleagues looked at the quality of ethnicity reporting so essentially
45:58
how the ftse 350 was reported was responding to the parker review
46:03
um and you know so we're having conversations around courage we're having conversations about just kind of
46:09
getting out there being explicit being direct understanding that we are not going to
46:15
be perfect which i completely advocate but i just want to i'm just thinking two two experiences
46:21
two related experiences from that piece of work that we found quite discouraging
46:28
um one was the active work it seemed to avoid
46:35
using race naming race race was obvious obsid and conflated with
46:42
nationality with culture with like with all other words uh so a
46:48
footy 350 firm that kind of says it's responding to the park review then
46:54
talking about diversity of nationality and geography you know shows that they're not even they're not
47:00
quite there yet um the other thing which we've kind of touched on but i really want to
47:05
emphasize is this um statement we found too many
47:10
uh uh ftse350 companies would say something along the
47:16
lines of well yes we are an equal opportunities you know employer but you know we're not gonna lower our
47:23
standards because meritocracy is important of course they didn't quite use those terms but there was
47:29
too often a conflation between the notion of diversity being just just a little bit too much to
47:36
ask for because we are meritocracies and that's a myth that's a fallacy that
47:42
actually in order for me to be diverse i actually need to sacrifice on my on my
47:47
talent levels but that um narrative was perpetuating over
47:52
and over and over again so before we even get to a point where an organization is like you know what yeah
47:59
let's record an ethnicity pay gap let's commit let's go out there i think there's some
48:04
really basic things that um even just at the level of report in putting in your animal reports
48:11
don't dance around race don't you know kind of throw off this um myth that um you know in order for
48:19
you to be diverse you're kind of you're you're making some sort of compromise in actuality
48:25
evidence that you're not a merit-based organization is in homogeneity the fact that everyone
48:30
looks the same suggests that it's not based on a meritocracy it's quite the opposite um so just a few
48:37
comments in terms of how much work it needs needs to be done
48:42
and ruby same question to you and maybe to throw in a question that's come from the audience about any advice you can give to organizations
48:48
that are fearful and doing mentioned a bit of a fear factor there about even talking about race
48:54
god i think we've all been scared about talking about race only started talking about it three years ago i hate talking about
49:00
about having to talk about why i'm different i mean look it's a real challenge and i think in the end you just have to
49:06
take the plunge and go do you know what we're going to have to start to have these conversations properly or nothing will change we'll just skirt around the
49:13
issue but it is hard and the best way i think is i mean i got business in the
49:18
community to write a small guide on how you talk about race because so many organizations don't even really like to
49:23
discuss it but i think and for some reason it's been easy to talk about women for so many years
49:29
but but i think we've we've we've got no choice but to tackle it so until until we're prepared to discuss it
49:35
nothing it will change and so i think in the last three years there has been quite a lot of conversations
49:40
about it with organizations but we keep coming back to if you want to change things put a plan
49:48
together of the things you're going to do that are right for your organization and you know so much of this is around
49:55
fit around culture around how do we talk about this how do we feel comfortable
50:00
well if you never surround yourself with anyone that's different to you you're never going to feel comfortable
50:06
so we need to find people you can talk to about it who who can help you with it who have been
50:11
through different experiences you know we talk about don't we organizations needing to be incredibly inclusive
50:17
culturally inclusive well how can you be culturally inclusive if you've only got people from one part
50:23
of one culture that work for you you're not you're you're culturally non-inclusive actually so um
50:31
it's very interesting as to what people even think about the words inclusion but it is a tough subject to talk about
50:37
um but we kind of need to get over ourselves a bit with that really it's there's a lot of other things that
50:42
are tough in life okay if we want to crack race talk about it put a plan together
50:47
deliver on the plan and you know i need you delivery i'm not really sure why we've spent so many years finding this
50:54
so difficult um i don't it's not a comfortable subject but it's one which is easy to crack if
51:01
we're prepared to but boards today if you've only ever surrounded yourself with people of one ethnicity
51:09
you can see why it's so hard for them to do and now you're hearing boards talking to
51:14
talk to individuals within their organizations of color try to try and get in their lived in
51:21
experiences and i'm sort of sitting there thinking well it's all very interesting it's another three years of talking put the data in put in a plan to change
51:29
it as you would with anything else you want to change in an organization stop thinking it's you know we seem to
51:35
skirt round this one's this one's in the too difficult box it's not but of course it is in the same
51:42
way it was probably very difficult to a group of men many many years ago bearing in mind the workplace was
51:48
designed for men because very few women were in it sooner or later they had to get used to changing it for women
51:54
it's exactly the same we just need to get on with it thank you and and peter any advice for
52:00
how the profession can encourage leaders to get on with it because i think a lot of the data collection would end up in the hr
52:06
to-do list um yeah i think it reinforces these points so absolutely get the data where are we as
52:12
an organization in terms of you know these aspects of diversity but i absolutely
52:19
one of the first times i met you you may remember we were doing a joint seminar with a dni group and young i think it was ey
52:25
and i made that comment on the platform i said you know it seems that it's very difficult to talk about race and this black guy
52:31
initially stuck up his hand and said no for you it is because you're white for me it's my lived experience
52:37
so i think what we have to encourage is get let's get the data so we know where we're starting and then open up the
52:42
conversations we're all agreeing which is to hear the lived experience because so many people
52:48
this is why we talk about things like white privilege now certainly white people just do not understand the lived experience of
52:53
people from ethnic minority backgrounds and they should understand it i should understand in the context of the organization so
52:59
opening up those conversations sharing experiences what's working what's not what other things do we need to do
53:04
should we be training our managers differently how do we help our managers to be more comfortable talking about these subjects this is not
53:10
just about what i do it's also permeating that through the organization those are all things which hr of course
53:16
can encourage and support and should be and so this becomes a front and center agenda for the organization
53:22
not just today but for the long term as well because as we're all saying this this is as much about sustainable and
53:28
responsible business as anything i can think of because the more inclusion and diversity have you break the group think you bring
53:34
the different experiences you reflect the communities and customers of which you're part of so let's never forget
53:40
to link these ideas to the reason why it's important for business to take it forward as well because it's also a truth that
53:48
you know some people do think this is compliance thing or it's just a current fad or whatever it might be and i've
53:53
heard many of those questions before too so let's get the evidence of what we look like today but also evidence as to why this is
53:59
important to support our businesses for the future okay i can see a lot of the points around kind of moving to action a
54:05
landing very well people really really uh behind that in the chat and somebody's asked once we've run the report and potentially find an ethnicity
54:12
pay gap what steps can employers then take to address the data and close the gap uh
54:17
doyan thoughts from you sure i think um i i'd be repeating a
54:23
couple of comments i made earlier kind of blending also some of peter's comments around analysis asking questions what is the
54:31
data telling us about certain groups of people in certain parts of our business
54:37
um and that would give us insights into the actions that need to be taken
54:42
um so at senior levels there is um for example um
54:49
i talked about sponsorship the power of the the the impact of sponsorship sponsorship is
54:54
a senior white leader kind of putting their name on the line on behalf of someone
54:59
who is underrepresented um if you find that at that level that you're not getting the
55:06
senior level diversity that you want then that is is is something that we know from the
55:12
research works it happens anyway in insider groups this is just about saying well you know put the effort in it's a
55:19
little bit more than a little effort to do it for people who um are in your outside degree it might be that you
55:27
were finding that at lower levels actually there are particular communities
55:32
who don't necessarily feel that this is the right organization for them and that's one of the explanations of
55:39
your play gap and so you think through well what are the ways in which we need to make sure for example at a team level
55:47
we are equipping managers with specific practical inclusive leadership practices
55:54
so that they are tuning into the diversity of their um of the talent at that level so
56:00
there's lots of different potential evidence-based actions that can be taken
56:05
and the ethnicity pay gap gives you uh additional data to pinpoint what is
56:11
going on and how you can fix it in addition to just paying people more which you should you should pay people
56:17
the same thank you and ruby any thoughts from you on that perhaps anything that you
56:22
did yourself as a ceo that worked i think one of the things we could all do um is
56:29
that one of the big areas which needs to change is the lack of sponsorship of individuals so we all did well in our
56:37
careers because people sponsored or supported us for whatever reason you know two great ceo supported me
56:44
helped me become chief executive it didn't happen just because i happened to turn up and do well it was you know
56:50
there was a lot of work a lot of support in that everyone needs support if you think
56:56
about anyone that gets promoted they are put forward they are mental they are supported and what we need to do here is really
57:02
think around sponsoring as a key element of trying to reduce that gap as we have done with women
57:08
because if we don't then it's not going to change because you can do all the nice stuff but sponsoring really matters
57:14
and that will go down to you know organizations saying we don't just want diverse shortlists we want really good
57:19
candidates we want them to get to that interview for a promotion well prepared and therefore if they
57:26
don't have access to the same support as others we want to make sure that there there's a level playing field by the time they
57:32
get there quite often what's happening is individuals with a main background don't have the networks don't get the
57:38
support therefore don't always get through the interview process because they don't know how to necessarily
57:43
always get through that or to get that dream job so sponsoring is going to be key
57:49
everything around recruitment process has got to change because if you don't have diverse groups
57:55
of individuals who are going to interview you and you don't have panels that are more diverse then you put people at a massive
58:01
disadvantage really just getting there on you know diverse shortlists for women but we certainly don't have them on bay
58:07
and also it's around how you you know for me it's all around how employees do
58:12
get to get promoted if that's if it's the case that we're just not promoting those for being
58:19
background then we have to work out individually in each organization what stops that individual and part of
58:26
it could be they're going to go and work for a team that just don't think they fit whatever fit may mean fit
58:31
such an important part you've got to get on with people but if you've never known anyone of this particular background who doesn't
58:38
necessarily say you know you know who doesn't have the same interests you you get to an interview you try and have
58:44
a chat on how you build a relationship it's quite difficult so that means a huge amount of support and
58:51
training for those in the organization to say look you're gonna have to get used to
58:57
having different types of teams it's not gonna be we all go into a room we can chat for 20 minutes about what we did at the weekend
59:02
because maybe none of us have got anything in common anymore but that's okay what we care about is we really care about what someone can
59:09
contribute to the organization we don't need to have to you know because so much about around
59:15
building teams is around getting on and having shared interests and you know and i remember going for my
59:21
first interview at mighty where they asked where the chairman asked me if i did hunting shooting or fishing and i said you gotta be joking i'm a
59:27
girl from a state school in the north of london who didn't grow up without anything i wouldn't even know where you start
59:33
with those things he kind of got over it in the end but it was a key component for how he hired
59:38
people so we need to understand culturally these things happen
59:43
and are happening all the time and it's no different to a very male uh management team
59:50
simply coming in on a monday and talking about football by the way i live with that for years i haven't got a clue what
59:55
was going on but you know i just kind of listened to it for 10 minutes but it didn't make me feel included um but i persevered
1:00:03
and it's about inclusion and about teams understanding and and by the way senior teams of women may
1:00:10
get this wrong because again they may be biased and want to talk about things the average guy doesn't want to talk about
1:00:15
so we have to think about behaviors in this as well thank you ruby i'm afraid we're out of
1:00:21
time there so i'm just going to quickly bring it to a close thank you so much ruby peter doing some really fabulous
1:00:27
messages i think the main takeaway for the audience is just do it just get on with it let's uh
1:00:32
do something and move from rhetoric to action um thank you so much everyone for
1:00:38
watching for your comments and really great comments going on in the chat and for your questions as well um i think i
1:00:43
covered as many of them as i could and apologies if i didn't get to yours um we have one more webinar in this
1:00:50
series uh it's next monday at the same time 12 30. we're going to be looking at the role of employee networks and how
1:00:55
businesses in hr can best support them so please do join us for that the webinar will be available to watch again
1:01:02
uh if you want or to share it with colleagues um from this afternoon or tomorrow and a
1:01:08
reminder to look out for the cipd reward management survey which includes some questions that are really relevant to today's discussion i saw that my
1:01:14
colleagues placed some of those in the chat but that's it from us this afternoon thank you so much for watching and
1:01:20
engaging and we will see you next time bye
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