|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
You're on your organization's diversity committee. You have the best of intentions.
And that's the problem.
It leads you to appeal for funding for all the wrong reasons.
Take healthcare for example.
The US foreign-born population comprises a larger segment than at any time in the past five decades. And this trend is expected to continue(1). People of diverse racial, ethnic, and cultural heritage suffer disproportionately from cardiovascular disease, diabetes, HIV/AIDS and every form of cancer. In addition, their infant mortality rates are generally higher(2). Minorities receive measurably poorer care and they suffer for it.
Great reasons for diversity training. Disastrous reasons to ask for executive funding for your diversity program.
If you doubt me, just look at your budget. Chances are you're getting sincere encouragement from the boardroom but not budget codes that represent significant financial resources.
Here's the nut of the problem.
If you're at or near the front lines--the medical floor if you're in healthcare, or sales or service if you're in a corporation--the discussions you're having about diversity training are not the discussions your executives are having.
In healthcare, for example, when physicians, nurses, and their department heads discuss diversity training, they talk about the increased needs they experience in serving minority populations.
That conversation centers on health disparities among ethnic and cultural minorities, how they might be overcome, the new treatments that are called for, and new techniques and perspectives staff need to be educated in.
That discussion is all good. All well-intentioned. And every part it increases the expense side of the income statement.
Your executives are having a discussion of their own.
What they want to know is how diversity training impacts the business of whatever business you're in. In healthcare, that means increasing your appeal to minority patients, competing for private purchaser business, responding to public purchaser demands, and improving cost effectiveness.
In other words, while frontline staff are talking about diversity training in a way that increases costs, executives are looking for strategies to decrease costs and increase income. As long as the frontline and boardroom talk past each other, programs like diversity training will fail to receive the recognition and funding they deserve.
But you don't need to wait for a more enlightened day. In fact, you can turn a few switches on yourself.
If you're a real advocate of diversity training, I recommend you start assembling a "business impact model", the sharp dark line that connects performance on the front line with your organization's ultimate business goals. There are some very good books where you can learn about this quickly. "The Success Case Method" by Robert Brinkerhoff and "Performance Consulting" by Robinson and Robinson are good places to start.
Here's the short course.
Instead of asking for money for diversity training, start from the top down. Look at your unit's business needs. In healthcare, this shows up as patient satisfaction scores, days in treatment, staffing levels, number of adverse events and law suits, and such.
Next, recognize that when your organization fails to work effectively with minority consumers, it's not only the consumers who suffer. You need to point out how your organization is missing its numbers, how improved performance on the frontline will help your unit meet it's goals, and how diversity training will create the improved performance you need.
Let me give you an example. Here's how diversity training translates to lower liability costs in hospitals.
Hospitals administrators have a significant incentive to reduce medical malpractice claims. If you do a little digging, you'll find out that four of five patients who sue haven't suffered medical negligence(3). Patients sue because they feel devalued, deserted, misunderstood, and misinformed(4).
Combine that with the knowledge that minority patients are less satisfied--in fact African Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans are 10-15 times more likely than whites to believe they would receive better health care if they were a different race(5)--and you have a recipe for trouble.
It will cost your hospital $25,000 to mount a defense for each claim, even if you win. And your hospital has scores of claims, possibly hundreds.
Put an argument like this together and see the mileage you get.
The discussion starts like this: "We have a problem with medical malpractice that we all want to solve. Each claim costs us $25,000 to defend. And X number of them have come from our staff's difficulty in engaging minorities effectively. How many cases do you think we could head off if we trained this group of staff to perform more effectively in their interactions with minority patients?"
Now you're talking about saving money and meeting organization goals.
And that's a welcome reason to commit funding.
Whatever cultural issues your organization is facing, they have business impacts. You just need to point them out, and make your proposal part of the solution. ______________________________________________________
1. National Center for Cultural Competence, Why is There a Compelling Need for Cultural Competence?
2. Cohen E, Goode TD. Policy Brief 1: Rationale for Cultural Competence in Primary Health Care. Washington, DC: National Center for Cultural Competence; Winter 1999.
3. Focus June 4, 2004, How Doctors Might Curb Malpractice Claims, News from Harvard Medical, Dental, & Public Health Schools
4. Beckman HB, Markakis KM, Suchman AL, Frankel RM. The doctor-patient relationship and malpractice: lessons from plaintiff depositions. Arch Intern Med. 1994;154:1365-1370
5. Center on an Aging Society Georgetown University, Issue Brief Number 5, February 2004, Cultural Competence in Health Care: Is it important for people with chronic conditions?
Tim Dawes is the founder of Interplay, Inc., a firm that helps healthcare organizations to exceed their strategic goals by demonstrating unexpected empathy to patients. Learn about a step-by-step process that helps your staff make their natural compassion more deliberate and consistent for patients, and sign up for monthly "how to" articles at http://www.interplaygroup.com
Take some bold steps and help your employees and business... Read More
Good news spreads quickly News of the invention of the... Read More
"Treat people as if they were what they ought to... Read More
Positive versus Negative WorkplacesWe have all worked in places where... Read More
Merely assigning a task with detailed instructions is not effective... Read More
What is the no. 1 asset in your business beside... Read More
'I heard it on the grapevine' the old song goes.... Read More
As we near the end of summer, here is a... Read More
A successful leader told me, "The biggest challenge I've had... Read More
Companies spend millions of dollars each year identifying their brand,... Read More
These factors where determined by interviews with and books from... Read More
People sometimes interchange the terms "know-how" and "knowledge", but there's... Read More
Modern business faces complex problems; management often calls upon highly-specialized... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation... Read More
We all see it . . . business markets are... Read More
Leaders speak 15 to 20 times daily. You speak at... Read More
Nobody's perfect, including the boss. Managers, we polled recently, acknowledged... Read More
It can be concluded with great certainty that certain organizational... Read More
Performance Management is a process that both employer and employee... Read More
MSDS SHEETSMSDS stands for Material Safety Data Sheets. MSDS sheets... Read More
--PREPARATION: The purpose of the therapeutic approach is to spark... Read More
Business IntelligenceBusiness Intelligence has become a very important activity in... Read More
Interested in learning how to reduce development time, save money... Read More
We all know that achieving better alignment, synergy and cooperation... Read More
Life has always been full of uncertainties. Over the last... Read More
This week I was asked to speak at an internal... Read More
The difference between leaders is ears. Good leaders not only... Read More
Every organization is looking for the holy grail of performance... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation... Read More
The following information is based upon over 500 interviews with... Read More
The Critical Success Factors Focusing on the... Read More
The permissive and participatory conduct which most employees take for... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation... Read More
THE MEASUREMENT OF TRAINING: Evaluation is one of the most... Read More
As a child, you probably heard, "to thine own self... Read More
This article relates to the human resource functions competency, commonly... Read More
Answer: Starting one.Most of us realize that there is probably... Read More
Marketing gurus are always coming up with new lingo but... Read More
What's the use?Nothing you do will hold down the cost... Read More
Many work environments now are open plan, with only a... Read More
It's that time again! Perhaps the most dreaded management practice... Read More
You're so excited you're practically bouncing off the walls. This... Read More
This article relates to the organizational structure competency, commonly evaluated... Read More
OK. So you have decided that your organization has to... Read More
There are different reactions that individuals experience during time of... Read More
It has been said, there is no better way to... Read More
It has been well documented that employees' productivity and job... Read More
Every one of us, in reality, has two people inside:... Read More
Best Practices StudiesThese studies can be defined as inquiries into... Read More
Everyone involved in running a business from the smallest start-up... Read More
Business Management |