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Business Case for Diversity. We are at a competitive disadvantage if we fail to recognize the needs of our constituents. Diversity. Labor Pool. Creativity/ Innovation. Customers/ Consumers. Corporate Citizenship. Better Business Results.
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Business Case for Diversity We are at a competitive disadvantage if we fail to recognize the needs of our constituents Diversity Labor Pool Creativity/ Innovation Customers/ Consumers Corporate Citizenship Better Business Results Diversity is more than simply desirable; it is an imperative in today’s business environment.
Aspects of Diversity Benefits • Labor Pool • Changing, broadening • Creativity & Innovation • From diverse perspectives, methodologies, experiences • Customers / Consumers • Influenced by a company’s reputation for supporting diversity • Corporate Citizenship • Responsible involvement in the wider community
Benefit$ to Business • Insight into multi-billion dollar market segment • Product / service design • Market understanding • Appealing product / services • Favorably viewed • Employee retention • Investment • Loyalty • Tax Incentives
Benefit$ to Business • Insight into multi-billion dollar market segment • Product / service design • Market understanding • Appealing product / services • Favorably viewed • Employee retention • Investment • Loyalty • Tax Incentives
Benefit$ to Business • Insight into multi-billion dollar market segment • Product / service design • Market understanding • Appealing product / services • Favorably viewed • Employee retention • Investment • Loyalty • Tax Incentives
The Impact of Invisible Disabilities • Many people with Invisible Disabilities do not disclose their disabilities for fear that it will change others’ perceptions of them. • Those with Invisible Disabilities don’t want their condition to define them, so they keep it quiet. • Because these disabilities are invisible those with the disabilities feel that they won’t be believed when they do disclose their conditions. • The visibly disabled have much more opportunity to dispel fears and to change misperceptions than do those whose disability cannot be seen. Source: Academy of Management Executive, 1994 Vol.8, No. 1
The Impact of Invisible Disabilities • “The courts can not legislate social acceptance of people with disabilities, and it is not possible to enforce changes in public behaviors or attitudes.” • “Educational efforts, training options, and overall awareness efforts are the most important steps in moving toward acceptance of those individuals with invisible disabilities.” Augmentation and Advocacy 38 (Fall 2001)
Topics • Background • What are Invisible Disabilities? • How Does the ADA Apply to Your Business? • Business Case • Recommendations
Dos & Don’ts Practical Application What you should do when an employee informs you they have a hidden disability
Do • Realize ‘Access’ includes making forms useable and alarms accessible • Find out about the disability (as easy as Wikipedia) • Develop procedures for maintaining and protecting confidential medical records • Be respectful of, and compliant with, requests for assistance • Treat an individual with a disability the same way you would treat any employee -- with dignity and respect
Don’t • Make assumptions; people with disabilities are the best judge of what they can or cannot do • Speculate how you would perform a specific task with that particular disability • Assume that certain jobs are more suited to persons with disabilities • Make medical judgments • Assume a disabled person is dissatisfied with their quality of life • Be offended if your offer of assistance is declined • Assume that reasonable accommodations are expensive
Online Resources • State of New Mexico Governor’s Commission on Disability www.gcd.state.nm.us • The Job Accommodation Network janweb.icdi.wvu.edu • ADA Homepage www.usdoj.gov/crt/ada • U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission www.eeoc.gov • National Organization on Disability www.nod.org • Legal Research www.findlaw.com • Government disability-related information and resources www.disabilityinfo.gov