Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Thursday, June 23 2022 - 00:12
AsiaNet
Three Quarters of Employees Say Racial Equity Policies Are Not Genuine
NEW YORK, June 22, 2022 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

    - New Catalyst research shows that 68% of employees also say their 
employers' Covid-related policies are not genuine.

In 2020, as employers were grappling with the pandemic and renewed calls for 
racial justice, many responded with new policies and pronouncements. But 
according to a survey of nearly 7,000 employees in 14 countries around the 
globe conducted by Catalyst [ 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3574223-1&h=1265223866&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.catalyst.org%2F&a=Catalyst 
], more than two out of three employees (68%) believe their organization's 
coronavirus-related policies for the care and safety of their workers were not 
genuine. In White-majority countries, three-quarters of employees reported that 
their organization's racial equity policies were not genuine.

Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/732308/Catalyst_Tagline_Logo.jpg

The report, Words Aren't Enough: The Risks of Performative Policies [ 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3574223-1&h=989099766&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.catalyst.org%2Freports%2Frisks-performative-policies&a=Words+Aren%27t+Enough%3A+The+Risks+of+Performative+Policies 
], shows that it's not enough to announce policies or issue statements. 
Organizations must follow through and take meaningful action. The data show 
that employees are savvy and recognize when company policies are merely 
performative—and when that is the conclusion they reach, there are consequences 
for organizations, including less engagement and intent to stay among employees.

"This report is a wake-up call for CEOs and other senior leaders at a time when 
employers are still facing high turnover due to the Great Resignation," said 
Lorraine Hariton, Catalyst President & CEO. "When faced with the next 
unprecedented disruption, leaders must be able to address it with empathy and 
authentic, meaningful actions."

Most Employees Do Not View Covid-19 Policies as Genuine but Have Better 
Experiences at Work When They Do—Key Findings:

    - More than two out of three employees (68%) reported that their 
      organization's Covid-19 policies were not genuine.
    - Employees who felt their organization's Covid-19 policies were genuine
      experience more inclusion, engagement, feelings of respect and value for
      their life circumstances, ability to balance life-work demands, and
      intent to stay.
    - Employees who perceived their organization's Covid-19 policies as genuine
      and had empathic senior leaders experienced less burnout than others.

Most Employees Do Not View Racial Equity Policies as Genuine but Have Better 
Experiences at Work When They Do—Key Findings:

    - Three-quarters (75%) of employees reported that their organization's
      racial equity policies were not genuine.
    - Employees from marginalized racial and ethnic groups were less likely to
      view these policies as genuine (23%) than White employees (29%). 
      Employees from marginalized racial and ethnic groups who felt their
      organization's racial equity policies were genuine experienced more
      inclusion, engagement, feelings of respect and value for their life
      circumstances, ability to balance life-work demands, and intent to stay.
    - Greater empathy from senior leaders was associated with increased
      perceptions of their organization's racial equity policies as genuine,
      leading to increased experiences of inclusion among employees from
      marginalized race and ethnic groups and increased engagement among women.

Report authors Tara Van Bommel, PhD [ 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3574223-1&h=2024718408&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.catalyst.org%2Fbio%2Ftara-van-bommel-phd%2F&a=Tara+Van+Bommel%2C+PhD 
] , Kathrina Robotham, PhD [ 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3574223-1&h=2608438557&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.catalyst.org%2Fbio%2Fkathrina-robotham%2F&a=Kathrina+Robotham%2C+PhD 
], and Danielle M. Jackson, PhD [ 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3574223-1&h=2934357884&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.catalyst.org%2Fbio%2Fdanielle-jackson-phd%2F&a=Danielle+M.+Jackson%2C+PhD 
], pinpoint leader empathy as a key determinant in whether employees perceived 
Covid-related and racial equity policies positively. Leaders who use their 
empathy skills are better able to create and communicate an authentic, 
equitable vision for the future and reap the employee and organizational 
benefits, according to the survey.

"We are amid a paradigm shift that compels companies and leaders to take a 
stand on the defining social and environmental issues of our time," said report 
author Van Bommel, who leads Catalyst's research on women and the future of 
work. "Empathy is a vital skill—one that can be learned, developed, and 
strengthened, and when CEOs and other senior leaders are empathic with 
employees, they are able to address employee priorities in a vision that will 
bring deep change and success to everyone."

This report, the third in Catalyst's series on Leveraging Disruption for 
Equity, lays out specific steps that CEOs and other senior leaders can take to 
be authentic and sincere by using empathy skills.

Methodology
Catalyst surveyed 6,975 employees in 14 countries. Respondents were recruited 
through a panel service company. At the time of the survey, all respondents 
were full-time workers. After obtaining informed consent, respondents completed 
an online survey about "technology and work-life experiences." The survey took 
approximately 20 minutes to complete and included questions about their 
experiences at work and a demographics section. Catalyst used a variety of 
statistical analyses to understand the relationships between a respondent's 
perceptions of Covid-19 and racial equity policies, senior leader empathy, and 
employee outcomes.

About Catalyst
Catalyst [ 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3574223-1&h=4287341375&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.catalyst.org%2F&a=Catalyst 
] is a global nonprofit supported by many of the world's most powerful CEOs and 
leading companies to help build workplaces that work for women. Founded in 
1962, Catalyst drives change with preeminent thought leadership, actionable 
solutions and a galvanized community of multinational corporations to 
accelerate and advance women into leadership—because progress for women is 
progress for everyone.

Contacts

Erin Souza-Rezendes
Senior Director, Global Communications
Catalyst
erezendes@catalyst.org

Stephanie Wolf
US Communications Consultant
Catalyst
stephanie@stephaniewolfpr.com

Ted Bravakis
Canada Communications Consultant
Catalyst
tbravakis@bravacomm.com

Frances Knox
EMEA Communications Consultant
Catalyst
frances@frankly-pr.co.uk

SOURCE  Catalyst

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