HRSpotlight

The DEI Dilemma: Experts Reveal Outcomes of Corporate Retreats

The DEI Dilemma: Experts Reveal Outcomes of Corporate Retreats

What happens when a company’s commitment to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion is put to the test? As some organizations begin to dial back their DEI programs, we are witnessing a real-time stress test of corporate values versus financial and political pressures. This moment of reckoning raises crucial questions about the future of workplace culture.

We asked a group of DEI experts, HR professionals, and business leaders to help navigate this uncertainty. They cautioned against the profound risks of losing momentum—eroded trust, stifled innovation, and a disengaged workforce. However, they also explored how this challenging period can serve as a catalyst for building more resilient, intentional, and impactful approaches to inclusion.

Discover their insights on the path forward, balancing pragmatic challenges with the non-negotiable need for progress.

Read on!

Dr. Qiana O’Leary

As CEO of Minty Educational Services and Instructional Assistant Professor at Texas A&M International University, my work sits at the intersection of culturally responsive leadership, educator wellness, and sustainable work culture.

My research is grounded in conversational leadership, an approach that centers intimacy, interactivity, inclusion, and intentionality as core elements of how leaders communicate and build trust.

Through this lens, inclusion is not an initiative.

It’s a way of being. A daily practice. It’s how we show up.

So when organizations scale back DEI efforts, they’re not just stepping away from a program. They’re signaling that equity is optional. And that message carries consequences: broken trust, lowered morale, and cultures that become performative rather than people-centered.

Conversational leadership offers a more sustainable path. One that isn’t reactive to political winds but rooted in the values that make organizations strong. Honest dialogue. Shared power. A commitment to belonging that doesn’t waiver.

This is the kind of leadership that holds. And this is the work we do at Minty.

Tabitha Ziegmann

When organizations choose to scale back DEI initiatives, they will likely face consequences that will impact them well beyond the surface metrics. When comprehensive support systems are dismantled, women and underrepresented employees bear the brunt of the impact.

Take structured parental leave policies as an example. When these programs are diminished, it’s women who are impacted the most as they typically shoulder the caregiving responsibilities. When this happens it leads to career interruptions that directly impact pay equity and create challenges that have long term effects, including: reduced participation in professional development, limited advancement opportunities, and widened wage gaps.

Similarly, cutting flexible work arrangements removes the very accommodations that help diverse talent balance personal responsibilities. McKinsey’s “Diversity Wins” report confirms the business case: companies in the top quartile for ethnic diversity are 36% more likely to outperform peers on profitability, while those leading in gender diversity see 25% better financial returns.

Forward-thinking organizations recognize the value in these benefits and do not view them as dispensable costs but as interconnected systems that create equitable workplaces where all employees can contribute their full potential while also managing their personal lives.

It’s in these environments where organizations and people come together driving innovation, retention, and sustainable growth.

Hayden Cohen

There are some short-term gains to be made here, but this is going to hurt businesses in the long term. 

Cutting DEI initiatives now may let companies eliminate some positions in HR and perhaps get on the good side of the current administration and their supporters, but it’s important to remember that the core of DEI is smart business. 

It’s about finding the best talent at the best price. 

Historically, women and minorities are underpaid and under-represented in leadership. 

I call that a market inefficiency to take advantage of.

Shannon Estreller
Director of People, EvolveMKD

Shannon Estreller

Scaling back DEI initiatives can have significant negative consequences for organizations, particularly in terms of engagement and retention. Employees who feel valued and included are more engaged and productive.

I think there’s a misconception about how DEI initiatives show up in the workplace.

At EvolveMKD, we understand that a workplace prioritizing Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion isn’t just checking a box—it’s creating a space where everyone can thrive. And our actions speak louder than words.

Our holistic approach to DEI is reflected in our benefits, employee wellness programs and philanthropy. For instance, our Annual Medical & Wellness reimbursement covers ad hoc childcare, birth & postpartum doula services, mental health therapy, physical therapy, and pet wellness.

Our Life Event Benefit supports family planning, reproductive health, and gender-affirming care, while our Paid Reproductive Loss Leave provides support during challenging times. We also celebrate and support DEI through cultural celebrations, community volunteer work, and targeted donations.

These initiatives are not standalone efforts but are woven into the fabric of our organization, ensuring that all employees and our local community feel valued and empowered. This commitment has led to a significant increase in our retention rate year over year.

Doug Crawford

In the long term, scaling back DEI efforts could also limit the diversity of talent an organization attracts.

Today, candidates, especially those just entering the workforce, are looking for employers who are committed to inclusivity and equal opportunities. If a company pulls back on its DEI initiatives, it might struggle to compete for top talent, particularly from younger generations who value these principles.

Organizations might find that their efforts to cut costs or streamline initiatives may end up costing them in employee satisfaction and talent retention in the long run.

These programs aren’t just about ticking a box; they’re an important part of creating a positive and productive workplace.

Robert Grunnah

In the real estate game, trust is currency—and trust is built when people feel seen, respected, and represented. That’s something DEI efforts help foster, whether you’re closing deals or running teams.

Cutting back on DEI might save money in the short term, but it could cost a lot more in the long run. When businesses quietly move away from being welcoming, they send the message that joining is up for grabs, whether they mean to or not. That lowers confidence, turns away the best people, and stops new ideas from coming up.

Different kinds of people on my team have seen deals that other teams missed because they saw them through a different set of eyes. I once worked with a bilingual agent who helped us reach a market group we hadn’t been able to reach before. Without her help, we would have missed out on six figures in sales.

That wasn’t just DEI on paper; that was the return on inclusion in the real world. Pulling back right now is not only dangerous but also not smart. Businesses don’t need tools that do things. They need strategies that are focused on people and change along with the areas they serve.

Harpreet Saini

As the CEO of a real estate investment company with a diverse workforce, I’ve had the opportunity to see firsthand how DEI initiatives have evolved and draw conclusions from data regarding their impact on their business.

The pullback from DEI initiatives now is a concerning trend that overlooks considerable business value.

According to McKinsey’s 2023 diversity report, more-diverse firms capture 19% more revenue from innovation and 35% better financial performance. By backing away from structured DEI initiatives, organizations risk losing these competitive differentiators that bring bottom-line achievement.

Firms that are reducing DEI efforts most typically reference budget or political reasons. Still, our experience is that incorporating diversity values into core business processes rather than discrete projects costs less to implement and is more successful.

We’ve found that incorporating inclusive practices into existing business processes results in employees being retained for 27% longer and 31% higher customer satisfaction rates in ethnically diverse communities where cultural competence directly impacts transaction success.

The worst possible consequence is the talent flight when companies send signals of diminished commitment to inclusion. Our industry research indicates that companies publicly retreating from DEI initiatives see a 42% increase in resignation rates of high-performing underrepresented group employees in six months.

This talent loss has measurable recruitment costs of $45,000-$150,000 per role while decreasing organizational knowledge and capability.

Rather than binary “all-in or all-out” DEI approaches, more progressive organizations are embracing integration models in which inclusive practices are incorporated into mainline business operations rather than existing as freestanding programs.

This has allowed our organization to have different points of view that drive innovation without politicizing the problems that tend to ensnare freestanding DEI departments.

Jonathan Palley

I definitely think that DEI is a good idea, but there have been some really bad implementations of it.

I know that the backlash to DEI isn’t being driven so much by, say, a bad HR training as by deeper racial animus, but I think it’s important to acknowledge that, while DEI was a good idea, it wasn’t working for a lot of people.

I do hope that DEI survives and moves forward, but it needs to improve.

Edward Hones

Short-Term Optics vs. Long-Term Risk: Scaling back DEI initiatives might feel like a safe move in the face of political or economic pressure, but from my perspective as an employment lawyer, it’s a legally and culturally shortsighted decision.

When companies pull back on DEI, they may reduce immediate public scrutiny, but they often increase their long-term exposure to discrimination claims, retention issues, and internal morale breakdowns.

I’ve seen firsthand how organizations that deprioritize inclusion begin to quietly lose top talent, especially from underrepresented groups.

The risk isn’t just about optics, it’s about losing the trust of your workforce.

DEI as a Legal and Strategic Imperative: I advise clients to see DEI not as a trend, but as part of their risk management and talent strategy. It’s about creating systems that help everyone thrive, which in turn reduces liability and drives innovation.

Organizations that proactively invest in equitable practices tend to experience fewer legal disputes because they’re addressing root causes before they escalate.

If leadership treats DEI like a PR campaign rather than a core value, it will always be the first thing cut, and that’s where real damage begins.

The companies that stay the course will be the ones best positioned for long-term success and legal resilience.

Emma Sinclair

Companies scaling back DEI initiatives are going to have a major talent problem in the medium term.

These companies that don’t make an effort to include women, returnees, carers, minorities will find that they have less boomerang hires, referrals, evangelists and advocates.

Talent is the number one challenge and need for all businesses – so it’s a short-term own goal.

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.

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The Human Side: HR Strategies for Layoffs and Transitions

The Human Side: HR Strategies for Layoffs and Transitions

This year, the workforce got hit hard with over 61,000 layoffs at big names like Walmart and Microsoft, fueled by shaky economies and the fast rise of automation and AI.

According to SHRM, 60% of those let go are finding it tough to land new jobs, pushing companies to rethink how they manage their people.

HR pros and business leaders are stepping in, focusing on training to keep employees on board and offering real support for those leaving.

In this article, the HR Spotlight team digs into answers with a key question:
“How is your company cutting down on layoffs or helping workers move on?”

From creative programs to shift talent within the organization to thoughtful outplacement support, see how forward-thinking businesses are tackling this tough time to strengthen their teams and stand by their people.

Read on!

Margaret Buj
Principal Recruiter, Mixmax

Margaret Buj – Mixmax

At Mixmax, we’ve been fortunate to grow sustainably. One of the ways we’ve minimized layoffs is by hiring responsibly and maintaining a lean, efficient team. We often hire contractors first-which gives both sides flexibility-before expanding full-time headcount.

When changes have occurred, transparency has been key. In my coaching work at Kadima Careers, I’ve supported many professionals post-layoff, and what I’ve seen work best (and encourage companies to do) includes:

  • Internal mobility and upskilling, so employees can pivot before roles are cut.
  • Proactive career coaching or transition support to help people find roles faster.
  • Encouraging employees to keep their networks warm and LinkedIn profiles strong—especially in uncertain markets.

Upskilling + proactive transparency = lower attrition and stronger long-term engagement.

Tammy Sons
Founder & CEO, TN Nursery

Tammy Sons – TN Nursery

Growing people in my business requires the same patience and intention I use to grow plants. Instead of letting downturns dictate layoffs, I concentrate on cross-training employees while developing abilities that meet our changing business requirements.

Our team adapts to shifting roles by providing members with fresh opportunities inside the company. Encouraging open discussions about goals and growth enables people to perceive transitions as steps forward instead of setbacks.

Our smaller size compared to major tech companies enables us to dedicate personal attention to each employee’s professional path.

True resilience develops through establishing strong foundations while expanding into new directions rather than reducing scope.

Miriam Groom – Mindful Career

The tech world is facing a reckoning. With over 61,000 layoffs in 2025 from major players like Walmart and Microsoft, the ripple effects are being felt across industries. According to SHRM, 60% of laid-off workers are still struggling to land new roles, and the emotional toll is immense.

At Mindful Career, we’ve supported hundreds of professionals through these very moments—engineers, UX designers, project leads—who walked out of one chapter unsure if the next one would even come. Our focus has never been just about job placement—it’s about career healing, reinvention, and human-centered strategy.

Our approach to reducing the impact of layoffs and aiding career transitions is twofold: individual transformation and organizational readiness.

For individuals, we provide structured support that helps them reclaim agency after sudden loss. This includes:

  • Behavioral profiling to uncover transferable strengths.
  • Career narrative rebuilding to reshape personal branding post-layoff.
  • Targeted upskilling pathways based on real-time labor market data.
  • One-on-one coaching focused on mindset, clarity, and re-entry strategy.

On the organizational side, we partner with HR teams to offer outplacement services, internal mobility consulting, and leadership support during restructuring. We help employers communicate layoffs with empathy, coach remaining staff through survivor’s guilt, and equip leaders to retain morale while making hard decisions.

One client, a senior product manager laid off from a retail-tech startup, came to us overwhelmed and emotionally burnt out. 

Within four sessions, she gained clarity around her non-negotiables, reframed her career goals, and secured a leadership role in a sustainability-focused company—an outcome more aligned with her values than her previous role had ever been. 

We’ve also supported internal HR partners from industries like fintech and healthtech in developing talent retention playbooks, helping them identify at-risk talent early and re-engage them through customized development plans—avoiding turnover altogether.

Layoffs are more than a business decision—they’re a rupture in someone’s story. At Mindful Career, we believe in meeting that moment not with generic advice, but with strategic clarity, deep listening, and personalized reinvention pathways.

Whether we’re working directly with jobseekers or advising HR teams post-restructure, our mission remains the same: to restore meaning, momentum, and confidence—one person at a time.

Volen Vulkov
Co-founder, Enhancv

Volen Vulkov – Enhancv

I still remember the first time I had to tell a talented colleague that her role was being eliminated. The look on her face stayed with me, and it changed how I think about layoffs.

Since then, I’ve pushed for open conversations about skill gaps and shifting business needs, rather than waiting for a crisis to force our hand.

Sometimes, that means sitting down with someone months before a change and mapping out a plan for them to learn something new or try a stretch assignment.

Our team has started pairing people from at-risk departments with mentors in growing areas of the company. One analyst who once felt stuck in a shrinking division now leads a data project that didn’t exist last year.

Watching her confidence grow as she learned on the job reminded me that upskilling isn’t just about saving jobs, it’s about helping people see themselves in a new light.

When transitions can’t be avoided, we focus on practical support. I’ve helped colleagues rewrite their resumes and even practiced interview questions with them.

Sometimes, just knowing someone is in your corner makes the next step feel less daunting. My hope is that by being proactive and personal, we make tough moments a little easier to bear, for everyone involved.

Josh Riutta – Mikku and Sons Roofing

As a general contractor and professional roofer, the current economic climate, particularly the significant tech layoffs in 2025, presents both challenges and opportunities.

While our industry isn’t directly impacted by tech sector fluctuations, the ripple effect on the job market and overall consumer confidence is undeniable. Our organization is proactively addressing these trends through a two-pronged approach focused on workforce stability and community support.

Firstly, we prioritize internal upskilling and diversification. Rather than facing potential layoffs, we invest in cross-training our existing crews in various aspects of general contracting beyond just roofing. This includes siding installation, minor structural repairs, and even basic carpentry. This not only enhances their individual skill sets and value but also allows us to offer a wider range of services, making our company more resilient to shifts in demand for specific trades.

Secondly, we’re exploring partnerships with local trade schools and community organizations to offer apprenticeship programs and transitional support for individuals from other sectors looking to enter the skilled trades. We believe in providing pathways for those impacted by layoffs to acquire valuable, hands-on skills that are consistently in demand, contributing to a stronger, more adaptable local workforce.

Chris Desino – Ocala Horse Properties

At Ocala Horse Properties, we believe that layoffs aren’t just numbers, they’re people, families, and futures.

In an industry shaped by luxury, loyalty is our real currency.

Rather than downsizing, we cross-train our staff across marketing, client services, and property management to build multi-skilled teams with long-term value.

When the market slows, instead of letting people go, we shift their focus, training agents in digital real estate, investing in personal branding workshops, and encouraging side ventures we help co-incubate.

It’s unconventional, but it works.

Real estate is cyclical, but our talent strategy doesn’t have to be. We don’t just protect jobs, we future-proof people.

Renante Hayes
Executive Director, Creloaded

Renante Hayes – Creloaded

Having personally navigated the dot-com crash early in my career, I’ve implemented preemptive strategies at our organization that have eliminated the need for layoffs entirely.

We’ve established a cross-training program where team members develop skills across multiple departments, creating versatility that prevents obsolescence. Our quarterly skills assessment identifies emerging technology gaps, allowing us to proactively upskill employees before their roles become vulnerable.

For the broader tech community, we’ve launched a transition assistance platform offering free skills assessments, resume rebuilding, and introductions to our hiring partner network for displaced workers. This initiative has helped over 300 laid-off professionals find new positions within 45 days.

Christopher Migliaccio – Warren and Migliaccio LLP

At Warren and Migliaccio, we prioritize retention by cross-training staff across multiple practice areas—this flexibility allows us to redistribute workload during downturns rather than resorting to layoffs.

We also maintain a proactive talent pipeline, so we’re never over-hiring based on short-term booms.

For team members considering transitions, we offer resume guidance, professional references, and flexible exit timelines.

It’s not just about saving jobs—it’s about investing in long-term professional resilience for everyone on the team.

Robbin Schuchmann – EOR Overview

Helping a client in the tech sector recently, I saw how leveraging Employer of Record (EOR) services eased transitions during workforce adjustments.

They faced a wave of layoffs but managed to retain critical talent by shifting some roles to remote positions in countries with lower operational costs, all while ensuring full compliance with local labor laws.

The EOR handled payroll, benefits, and legal employment responsibilities, which allowed the client to redeploy employees rather than let them go outright.

This approach softened the impact of layoffs and kept valuable skills within reach, giving the company time to upskill and reskill staff for future needs.

Supporting transitions means creating flexibility in employment models. By using EORs, companies can tap into global talent pools quickly and compliantly, which helps reduce the pressure to downsize domestically.

This strategy not only aids employees in finding new roles faster but also helps businesses maintain continuity and morale during uncertain times. It’s a practical way to bridge gaps in workforce demand without the full disruption of layoffs.

David Hunt – Versys Media

At Versys Media, we’ve prioritized skills development over layoffs by fostering a culture of continuous learning.

We offer various training programs that align with evolving industry trends, particularly in digital marketing and web development.

For instance, our recent initiative involved upskilling team members in emerging technologies like AI and data-driven marketing strategies. This not only equips our employees with in-demand skills but also strengthens our service offerings to clients.

By investing in our team’s growth, we mitigate the risk of layoffs during challenging times and improve retention rates.

We believe that empowering employees is key to navigating economic fluctuations and maintaining a competitive edge.

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.

Recent Posts

Mending the Trust Divide: Strategies for a More Engaged Workforce

Mending the Trust Divide: Strategies for a More Engaged Workforce

The 2025 Edelman Trust Barometer, unveiled in January, has sounded a wake-up call, exposing a troubling global decline in employee trust: Only 75% of workers now believe their employers “do the right thing,” a steep 3-point drop from previous years that underscores a widening trust gap in workplaces worldwide.

As organizations navigate a landscape marked by remote work fatigue, economic uncertainty, and a 3.5% unemployment rate (SHRM, 2025), this erosion of confidence threatens morale, productivity, and retention.

The Techronicler team reached out to a powerhouse panel of HR experts and business leaders to confront this pressing challenge with a critical query:

As an HR or business leader, what practical steps would you suggest to rebuild trust and address this workplace challenge?

Their insightful, hands-on strategies—ranging from transparent communication to innovative engagement initiatives—promise to bridge the divide and reignite a culture of trust.

Dive into their expert roadmaps and discover how to transform your workplace for the better!

Read on!

Kurt Uhlir
Chief Marketing Officer, eZ Home Search

Kurt Uhlir

Let’s stop pretending the trust gap is just about layoffs or bad CEOs—it’s about a lack of clarity and connection.

In my experience leading high-growth companies and coaching other GTM leaders, I see two major breakdowns behind today’s erosion in employee trust.

First, there’s a transparency gap:- Too many leadership teams fail to explain the why behind business decisions. I’m not saying share every spreadsheet—but employees should understand the key outcomes the company is aiming for, across different timeframes. Just as important, they need to know how their day-to-day work contributes. Without that, people feel like bystanders. So when leaders say “we missed our numbers,” it doesn’t feel honest—it feels disconnected. In hindsight, employees often realize they could’ve helped—if only someone had taken the time to connect the dots. Leaders need to remember, sometimes you have to go slow to go fast—or go far.

Second, return-to-office mandates have fractured trust by ignoring how distributed teams really operate:- I’ve said this before, and it keeps proving true: Once your team expands beyond a single office, every additional location functionally becomes remote. That’s when your workplace strategy either scales your culture—or erodes it. I’m not hiring people to sit in a building. I’m hiring them to drive results. Many RTO policies send the wrong message: “We don’t trust you unless we can see you.” That’s a culture killer. And the irony? With modern tools, I have better visibility into performance today than ever before.

Rebuilding trust takes more than a town hall or a Slack update. It requires intentional leadership, visible actions, and repeated clarity. Start there—and the culture will follow.

Margaret Buj
Principal Recruiter, Mixmax

Margaret Buj

Trust is built in the small moments- clear communication, fair treatment, and follow-through. At Mixmax, we operate with a lot of transparency: hiring managers and leadership share strategy updates regularly, and we don’t over-promise.

In my coaching work, the companies that retain trust even in hard times are the ones that:

  • Acknowledge uncertainty honestly.
  • Involve employees in decisions where possible.
  • Follow through on what they say they’ll do (e.g., support for DEI, real investment in wellness, not just performative posts).

Trust can’t be rebuilt overnight, but consistency matters. One leader I worked with started weekly “Ask Me Anything” sessions during a reorg – it turned employee anxiety into collaboration.

Dr. Kirk Adams
Disability Inclusion Strategist & Speaker, Innovative Impact LLC

Dr. Kirk Adams

To rebuild trust in the workplace, especially from a disability inclusion standpoint, leaders must prioritize accessibility, representation, and open communication.

Start by embedding disability inclusion into core values and policies. Ensure all digital and physical environments meet or exceed accessibility standards, and provide reasonable accommodations proactively, not reactively.

Establish Employee Resource Groups (ERGs), which are voluntary, employee-led groups that support community and belonging, for people with disabilities. Make sure these groups have executive sponsorship. Inclusive hiring practices, visible leadership commitment, and regular training on disability awareness foster a culture of respect. Involve employees with disabilities in decision-making processes.

Nothing about us without us. Transparent communication about progress and challenges builds credibility and trust. When employees feel seen, heard, and supported, trust follows.

Genevieve Piturro

The change-maker for building trust between management and employees is right in front of us, a truth we’ve always known in our hearts – genuine human connection. It has taken me 25 years to fully embrace the leadership truth that human connection is the expression of love – and love is the key to success for all of us growing our organizations.

Here are a few ways leaders can build trust:

Start each day by asking yourself, “What can I do to bring people together?”: Have some fun and surprise everyone with a long lunch and a game tournament! Try Checkers, Monopoly, even Family Feud! Or, go bigger and bring in a pro to facilitate a Murder Mystery event! While together, highlight uplifting news or updates on a current goal to inspire engaging conversation. Having team fun will last far longer than one day.

“Do you have 30 minutes today? I’d like to know how it’s going.”: Invite someone you’re still getting to know for a one-on-one. Let them know you’re interested in how they’re doing with the project they’re working on and if they have any special weekend or summer plans coming up. Let your heart lead your conversation – it knows exactly what to do – and say.

“What’s one skill that most people don’t know you have?”: It’s SPRING – Take it Outside! Enjoy the smell of flowers and soak up some sun by moving your team – and your conversations outside. Make it fun by ordering a picnic lunch complete with fruit, cheese, sandwiches, chips, and dessert. Start off by asking each team member to answer one question such as, “What’s 1 skill that most people don’t know you have?”

Ruth Rathblott
Speaker, Author, Ruth Rathblott

Ruth Rathblott

The drop in employee trust isn’t just about policies or perks, or just a data point; it reflects something deeper: people don’t feel safe to fully show up at work.

As someone who hid my limb difference for 25 years, I know the toll it takes to pretend everything’s fine—to stay quiet, to overperform in hopes of belonging. That same dynamic plays out in workplaces every day.

And as a former CEO, I also know what it’s like to be in the leadership seat—wanting to build trust with your team, but not always knowing if you’re creating the space for it. It can be lonely. And it takes intentional, consistent work.

When employees feel they have to hide—parts of their identity, their concerns, or their ideas—trust breaks down. And that disconnection quietly erodes engagement, innovation, and retention.

To rebuild trust, leaders need to go first. That means:

  • Naming what’s not being said: Create space for honest, two-way dialogue—not just surveys or check-ins.
  • Modeling vulnerability: When leaders share a challenge or truth, they give others permission to do the same.
  • Valuing difference over sameness: Reward the voices that bring something new—not just the ones that echo the norm.

Trust isn’t a checkbox—it’s a culture. And it starts when people feel safe enough to be seen and ask for the support they need. It’s also a two-way street!

Christopher Migliaccio

I’ve led a law firm through major transitions and understand how trust can make—or—break a professional environment.

Over the years, we’ve built a culture that emphasizes transparency and follow-through.

This is what my experiences have taught me:

One of the most effective ways to rebuild employee trust is to ensure that leadership models accountability.

When something goes wrong, owning the mistake publicly, rather than spinning it, can be more powerful than any team-building activity.

Equally important is the consistency between what leadership says and what it does.

Trust breaks when there’s a gap between messaging and action. It rebuilds when even the small promises are kept.

Finally, give employees a meaningful seat at the table—ask for their feedback, implement what you can, and explain transparently when you can’t.

David Goldstein

Drawing from decades of industry experience, I emphasize that involving employees in meaningful Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) activities offers profound benefits, especially in today’s uncertain economic climate.

These initiatives don’t just check a box, they foster a powerful sense of purpose and unity when employees work together towards a common cause.

For organizations, they are a way to demonstrate company values in action and a commitment to making a positive impact both for employees and the larger community.

CSR team-building events, like TeamBonding’s Do Good Bus or Charity Bike Build, are opportunities to boost engagement and create lasting, positive memories, transforming team building into genuinely impactful and fun experiences.

Elene Cafasso

The number one way to build trust is to have a high “say/do ratio”. If you say it, announce it or promise it – do it!

Frequent changes in direction lose buy-in because they’re just the “flavor of the month”. Eventually, they’re ignored.

Authentic, frequent communication is the foundation of trust. Speak in conversational language, not PR soundbites.

Even if there’s something you can’t share yet, address the elephant in the room or any rumors. Let folks know when you will be able to share more, or why you can’t do so at this time.

Even if employees don’t like the message, they’ll appreciate your honesty.

Our reptilian brains get triggered when there’s a lack of control, certainty or fairness. Trust is extraordinarily difficult to rebuild if any of these are missing.

Use the Golden Rule and treat people like intelligent adults. It pays off!

Andrea Hayley-Sankaran

Rebuilding trust starts with listening—and really meaning it.

At Lotuswood Farm, we keep things small, intimate, and transparent. But even in a tight-knit team, trust can waver when people feel like their voice doesn’t matter. So I make it a point to ask questions without an agenda, to have open conversations where no one is punished for telling the truth.

I also believe leaders need to show more vulnerability. If you want people to trust you, you have to admit when you’re unsure or when you’ve made the wrong call. That builds emotional safety, and emotional safety builds trust.

When trust is present, people take initiative, offer ideas, and stick around for the long haul—not because they have to, but because they want to.

David Maffei

Rebuilding trust in the workplace starts with strong, consistent communication, and middle managers are the unsung heroes who can make that happen.

As the most trusted source of information, with 57% of employees saying they trust their immediate supervisor “a great deal,” middle managers play a critical role in bridging leadership and frontline teams.

Organizations should provide these managers with timely, transparent updates and encourage two-way communication to further this sense of trust.

Staffbase’s data revealed that 88% of employees who feel well informed about changes also report being happy in their jobs, which ultimately contributes to employee retention and productivity.

Leveraging trusted tools like employee apps, ranked the top source of information by 60% of users, can also further enhance transparency and engagement.

When communication flows clearly and consistently, trust follows.

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.

Recent Posts

Ending Blame Culture: Leaders’ Playbook for Workforce Growth

Ending Blame Culture: Leaders’ Playbook for Workforce Growth

Accountability forms the bedrock of a high-performing organizational culture, but for many teams, the tendency to shift blame creates a significant obstacle.

Often stemming from fear of failure or a lack of ownership, this behavior can undermine workforce morale, stall professional growth, and contribute to a 20% decline in employee engagement, as reported by Gallup in 2024.

In 2025, with a 3.5% unemployment rate (SHRM, 2025) intensifying talent competition and economic pressures mounting, cultivating accountability has become a top priority for business success.

The HR Spotlight team engaged with HR and business leaders to tackle the question:

Shifting blame comes easy to some employees, a habit that can be quite detrimental to workforce morale and growth. What are your go-to solutions to improving accountability within your workforce?

Their responses—from fostering open communication to implementing tech-driven performance tracking—provide actionable insights for creating a culture of responsibility and teamwork, empowering organizations to flourish amidst today’s economic and cultural challenges.

Read on!

Leila Rao
Agile Coach, Author, Cultural Cartography

Leila Rao

To strengthen accountability, start with clear expectations and shared goals. When people know what success looks like, and how it fits into the broader purpose, they can take initiative with confidence.

It also helps when work is visible. Supported, not surveilled, celebrating progress and making room for real-time course correction when needed.

And perhaps most importantly, accountability stems from feedback – especially when it’s part of everyday culture, not just isolated occasions.

A quick conversation, a thoughtful check-in, a moment of acknowledgment – these all reinforce that follow-through matters. It’s in showing up for each other that accountability becomes a shared value.

When people feel aligned, equipped, and respected, accountability doesn’t need to be enforced, it’s embedded.

Nirmal G
Founder & CMO, WP Creative

Nirmal G

I used to think accountability was about setting rules and hoping people followed them. But what really changed for us was creating a space where people felt safe to speak up.

What I noticed was that when something went wrong there was either silence or finger pointing. That slows everything down and builds tension. So we made one simple change. Every task has one clear owner. No confusion, no passing the buck.

We also started doing weekly check-ins. These aren’t formal meetings, just a chance to talk about what’s working and where someone might need help. It’s helped people feel more supported and less defensive. I also make sure to own my mistakes. If I mess up I say it. That sets the tone.

When people see being honest won’t get them in trouble they’re more likely to take responsibility. Over time that built a stronger, more accountable team.

Ushmana Rai

Shifting blame is usually an indication of a more insecure, confused, or untrusting state of being in people. The solution that I have always turned to is creating an accountability culture where it is seen as empowering, rather than punishing.

Define ownership clearly: There must always be one, and only one, person who is responsible for every task or project. Shared responsibility leads to shared excuses.

Make accountability visible: We just have simple dashboards open to all, with tasks, owners, and deadlines on it. The visibility alone brings in enough pressure—without micromanagement.

Normalization of accountability from the top: Leaders have to show what it means to own up to mistakes. If a manager doesn’t ever say, “This is my fault,” no one else will.

Looking forward to holding oneself accountable: Instead of raising questions like, “Who is to blame?”, we ask, “How can we avoid such things in the future?” It is a change in orientation from defensiveness to improvement.

Accountability can only be active when people feel empowered and trusted. It is not about control; it is about clarity, consistency, and culture.

Jean-Louis Benard
Co-founder & CEO, Sociabble

Jean-Louis Benard

Accountability in the workplace is important for overall success. Maintaining it is not just limited to having expectations and rules in place. One of the biggest challenges I have faced is tackling employees who have the tendency to shift blame.

To handle this issue, I focused on offering my team psychological safety, where they feel safe to own both their successes and failures. This doesn’t mean you overlook mistakes. You simply normalize failure and turn it into a learning opportunity.

The best way to do this is to stay vulnerable and open about your own mistakes and lessons. Teams are often more open to learning and improving when they feel it is okay to make mistakes.

To build a sense of accountability, clear communication is also important. Have specific expectations for each individual and goals that can be tracked so that everyone knows what they are responsible for.

Regular check-ins, celebrating small wins, and discussing areas of improvement can also make a difference.

Finally, tell your teams about the difference their work is making in the company.

When employees understand their direct impact, they are more likely to take ownership and hold themselves accountable.

This way, their morale will improve, and they will work for continuous growth.

Corina Tham
Finance & Sales Director, CheapForexVPS

Corina Tham

Fostering accountability in the workplace begins with defining clear responsibilities and demonstrating them in action.

I think it’s vital to build a culture where team members grasp their duties and feel encouraged to take charge of their work. Consistent feedback sessions and transparent conversations have worked well for me to track progress and resolve obstacles early on.

I’ve also noticed that celebrating individual achievements reinforces a sense of duty, as people are naturally motivated to keep performing well. When errors occur, I promote discussions centered on growth and solutions rather than assigning blame.

Trust is equally crucial—showing confidence in your team inspires them to respond with accountability.

At its core, it’s about creating an atmosphere where everyone feels appreciated and driven to deliver their best.

Dr. Victoria Grinman

From my work with teams navigating growth and change, I’ve found that blame rarely stems from malice; it’s often a protective reflex in environments where psychological safety is low and perfection is prized over process.

To counter this, I guide leaders to:

  • Normalize healthy mistake culture by modeling self-accountability at the top and actively celebrating course correction as a sign of strength.
  • Use values as anchors—when accountability is framed as alignment with shared values rather than personal flaw, people step forward rather than shrink back.
  • Create feedback systems that invite ownership: Regular, skillful feedback loops—paired with development-oriented 1:1s—turn defensiveness into engagement.

Dr. Felix Lucian Happich

Any business owner will tell you that mistakes are inevitable in running an enterprise. Success will depend on how one reacts to it. To encourage accountability in the workplace, focus on the process rather than the person to blame.

Simon Sinek, author of Start with Why, has said that leaders who shift blame to employees can erode trust and create a culture of fear. He also said that accountability starts from the leaders. Instead of asking who made the mistake, true accountability focuses on why things went wrong.

Concrete ways that this can be achieved include setting up a clear system where expectations and roles are clearly defined. There should also be a regular set of feedback mechanisms that makes use of measurable and realistic goals. Clarity can help a business owner spot issues more easily.

Finally, ensure that there is a culture of responsibility in the company. Open communication and productive feedback loops should be in place. An example of this is regular check-ins and performance reviews.

Jocelyn Greenky

When you’re seeking to improve accountability, it pays to be more cut and dried than you would be in another aspect of your business and employee relations.

Here’s my advice, stop the blame game dead in its tracks by sticking to facts: whose job was it to get a particular task done? What was the hangup? Stay business-like and non emotional.

Create, on your own, an SOP (standard operating procedure) document to ensure transparency moving forward and this may require a digital checklist.

Shifting blame is a CLASSIC tactic of manipulators – there are many in our work environments – I call this being an offensive player. Some people are brilliant at this because most colleagues are not prepared for this type of aggression.

Good bosses know a bully when they see one. Addressing micro or macro aggressions face to face will go a long way to culling bad habits in your staff and boosting company morale.

Brian Futral
Founder & Head of Content, The Marketing Heaven

Brain Futral

Kill the Hero Culture: The fastest way to poison accountability is to idolize the firefighter who swoops in to fix everything at the last minute. That mindset creates blame silos. Instead, we reward consistency, not crisis control. When someone messes up but reports it early, they’re praised louder than the person who hides it until it’s unfixable.

You want to make accountability less about punishment and more about process alignment. I run post-error celebrations. It sounds weird, but it works. We dissect mistakes over donuts. When people know they won’t be shamed, they get honest fast.

Accountability by Design: We also engineered responsibility into our workflows. Not “you own this task” nonsense, but “you own this metric.” If a campaign tanks, no one’s hiding behind a task list they’re answering to performance data they agreed to own.

Most folks don’t avoid responsibility because they’re lazy; they avoid it because they think it’ll blow back unfairly. Fix that, and accountability becomes self-reinforcing.

The AI arms race brewing globally will leave behind organizations that can’t self-correct quickly. Accountability isn’t a buzzword. It’s a competitive edge.

In my shop, you’re not ready for leadership if you can’t say what went wrong and what you’ll do differently next time. And that clarity builds trust like nothing else.

Margaret Rogers

It really starts with making sure there is alignment and a shared understanding of what someone’s role is accountable for, the outcomes that they drive, and principles of behavior. For experienced people, they will be better equipped to define how they get to the outcomes they are responsible for, while those early in their career might need more directing.

Quantitative and qualitative feedback loops are critical here for a person to be able to adapt what they are doing, especially if what they are doing is not working. It’s also why it’s critical to have a team that is committed to each others’ success, is willing to talk about our blind spots with candor and respect, and be open to taking in the feedback from others. When you have a team that can communicate this way, you offer the psychological safety required to avoid the need for blame-shifting all together.

As for the rationalizing or redirecting that often comes with blame-shifting, it’s important that these difficult conversations stay focused on what was in their control and what was within their ability to influence. As a leader, you have to provide some level of grace while still being able to hold others to the expectations they agreed to when they took the job.

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.

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Unlocking Gen Z Potential: Innovative Tools and Tactics for Flexible Work Success

Unlocking Gen Z Potential: Innovative Tools and Tactics for Flexible Work Success

With 46% of Gen Z prioritizing flexible schedules (per recent EY insights), the workplace is undergoing quite a noticeable shift as this digital-native generation demands work that fits their lives—not the other way around.

The Techronicler team tapped into the expertise of top HR leaders and business innovators to explore a burning question:

With 46% of Gen Z prioritizing flexible schedules, how is your organization adapting to meet this demand? What flexible work policies or tools have you implemented, and how do you balance Gen Z’s needs with other generations and business goals? Share your strategies and challenges!

Their candid insights reveal a bold new era of work—where adaptability meets ambition—and offer a roadmap for thriving in a multigenerational workforce.

Read on!

Margaret Buj
Principal Recruiter, Mixmax

Margaret Buj – Mixmax

At Mixmax, we’ve always embraced flexibility – we’re a fully remote company, with contractors and employees working across Europe, LATAM, the USA, and even the Philippines. That flexibility isn’t just about location, though. It’s also about trusting people to work when they’re most productive.

We don’t have rigid 9–5 expectations. Instead, we focus on outcomes. We use async tools like Notion, Slack, and Loom to enable collaboration across time zones, and we encourage autonomy. For Gen Z, who often value freedom and balance, this is a huge draw. But it’s not only about them-we’ve found this model works across generations.

The challenge? Keeping connection and culture alive without physical offices. That’s why we’ve invested in intentional rituals: regular all-hands, remote-friendly team events, and async onboarding tools that make people feel welcome. It’s about balancing flexibility with clarity and structure.

Steven Rothberg
Founder and Chief Visionary Officer, College Recruiter

Steven Rothberg – College Recruiter

I’ve heard it said that when it came to work, Baby Boomers wanted to make as much money as possible, Gen Xers like me wanted to make enough money to have balance between work and pleasure, Millennials wanted to figure out how others were making so much more money, and Gen Z wanted to figure out what money was as they didn’t have any.

If you agree that this statement isn’t entirely in jest, what it probably says to you is that Gen Z understands that its opportunity to make a lot of money from work isn’t nearly as good as the opportunities faced by previous generations, and so it is only natural that Gen Z will then prioritize other facets related to work, such as flexible work schedules.

One way that the company that I founded, College Recruiter job search site, adapted to meet this demand for more flexible work schedules was to shift to an entirely remote workforce way back in 1997. We require all of our employees globally to work roughly the same hours, but we don’t really care if someone starts at 8am or 10am our time, as long as most of their work hours overlap with those of the rest of our team.

Andrew Peluso – What Kind Of Bug Is This

We offer fully remote work with flexible daily schedules, as long as the job is completed and clients are satisfied.

That’s our baseline.

For Gen Z, we’ve found they value autonomy, but still want structure, so we anchor the week with two mandatory team calls and clear deliverables.

The challenge is syncing that flexibility with client deadlines and cross-generational teammates who may prefer traditional hours.

We use tools like ClickUp and Loom to manage asynchronous communication, which lets everyone contribute on schedule without dropping the ball.

It’s not perfect, but our productivity hasn’t dipped, and our team churn is near zero.

Hasan Hanif
Director, CEO, & Accountant, Colour Vistas

Hasan Hanif – Colour Vistas

Over at Colour Vistas, we are aware that there’s a flexibility boom, particularly from the Gen Z, the sole future workforce, and this has compelled us to offer flexible working hours and remote working.

This is because we have discovered that work-life balance is a prerequisite for almost all Gen Z.

We have also put in place all processes of digital communication and collaboration via Slack, Zoom, etc. to ensure that everyone in the organization is reached no matter where they live.

The main important thing in this is trust-trust for each employee to plan their schedule with regard to deadlines and quality of work. And that is an effective change for an encouraged and engaged team that can spend their time freely both personally and professionally.

But finding one’s balance between what Gen Z needs and what the rest of the generations seek isn’t easy. A few of our employees, especially some long-time ones, are not exactly what you would call flexible.

Therefore, from our point of view, we have clear communication upfront, set expectations, and attempt to operate beyond that line. In addition to open communication, we make sure that our entire team understands the benefits of flexibility among work locations that apply to the collective whole, but some degree of importance is attached to teamwork and collaboration.

Finding that place in the middle where flexibility is accepted but not to the exclusion of productivity or teamwork has been something that has worked fairly well but is always fine-tuning because we have to expand and learn more about what each generation wants.

Oryna Shestakova
Head of Communications, PapersOwl

Oryna Shestakova – PapersOwl

Our research at PapersOwl reveals that 95% of Gen Z and young Millennials find certain workplace behaviors – such as career catfishing, quiet vacationing, and coffee badging, as well as clocking out earlier, napping during working hours, and using corporate software for personal matters – acceptable. Many admitted to having done at least one of the 15 shortcuts we asked about.

These behaviors underscore Gen Z’s demand for greater autonomy in the workplace.

Lucy, one of the respondents, mentioned, ‘Why stay in a job that doesn’t respect me when I can freelance or find something better?’

Josh, another survey participant answered, ‘As long as I deliver on time, does it matter if I work from Bali beach?’

Desire for flexibility in the workday (66%); preference for working in a different location (41%) – These are the top two reasons why Gen Zers clock in and then go work somewhere else.

Organizations aiming to retain Gen Z talent must adapt by offering flexible schedules, prioritizing mental health, and fostering an environment of trust and open communication to balance generational expectations and overall business goals – or they risk having employees who would skip work occasionally due to mental strain(46%) or “just because they can.”

Amy Mayer
Product Engineer, Shawood

Amy Mayer – Shawood

To support Gen Z’s flexible work desires, we employed a hybrid work environment and integrated Asana and Zoom for async collaboration.

Productivity occurs via expectations and an outcome-based review system.

We’ve found success with choice versus compulsion—it transcends generations. Some people want direction; others want the freedom to determine what’s best for them.

That’s where we falter from a cultural and connective standpoint, but we’ve created many in-person team days to combat this issue.

Grace Savage
Brand & AI Specialist, Tradie Agency

Grace Savage – Tradie Agency

We don’t manage Gen Z by the hour. We manage them by outcomes.

Gen Z is the first fully internet-native generation; they are aware of their rights, their worth, and their options. They’ve grown up in a world of Uber, Fiverr, and YouTube monetization. Flexibility isn’t a perk to them – it’s the baseline.

So here’s how we’ve adapted:

Outcomes Over Hours: We’ve moved away from traditional 9-5 structures. Instead, we define clear KPIs, deliverables, or quotas and measure team members against those. If someone delivers what’s required, how or when they do it is secondary.

They might produce a website, write a launch email sequence, or complete a marketing rollout, and whether that happens at 10am or 10pm is up to them. We pay for the result, not the presence.

“Uber Model” for Knowledge Work: For many roles, especially in creative, support, or digital ops, we’ve adopted a drop-in model. Team members can log in when they’re ready to work, complete specific tasks or shifts, and log off. We don’t require fixed daily hours unless the role specifically demands it.

Some work casually. Some work like full-timers. It’s opt-in productivity.

Structured Touchpoints, Not Structured Days: We do keep a handful of fixed, team-wide syncs each week. But otherwise, they’re free to structure their time. This hybrid setup keeps alignment without micromanagement.

How We Balance Generational Needs

Not everyone wants complete flexibility; some prefer predictability. So, we keep one rule in place: clarity and fairness around expectations. If someone thrives with a 9-5 rhythm, that’s respected too. We don’t impose freedom; we offer it.

The core principle is mutual respect:

  • You own your outcomes.
  • We trust you to get them done.
  • You get paid based on value, not time.

The Challenges

The biggest challenge is the mindset shift. Leaders must move from managing time to managing trust. It’s uncomfortable at first, but once you see how Gen Z responds, it becomes second nature.

They’re not chasing gold watches at retirement. They’re chasing purpose, autonomy, and meaningful work. And if you can offer that, they’ll show up, deliver, and stick around.

Flexible work isn’t a “Gen Z” policy. It’s the new standard for high-output teams. The sooner you structure your business around outcomes instead of hours, the faster you’ll attract (and retain) the best talent across every generation.

Andres Bernot – Wow! Shirts

We recognize that in the ways that flexibility is a major driver, one would probably say, for Gen-Z talent. The company has moved into flexible schedules and works remotely, especially on roles that allow such as Marketing and Design.

For example, the Design team’s work is hybrid, having aspects of in-office work and a requirement to work remotely. This way, they will be working outside their normal hours, tapping their creative juices without being as much pushed for productivity, yet ensuring job satisfaction.

We also employ Slack, Asana, and other online-created communities in keeping voices and projects going, ensuring that people at different places are aligned.

It is not always easy to balance the flexibility demanded by Gen Z workers with that needed by others from different generations and the business objectives. Luckily, we have learned that when given choices suiting different preferences, everyone thrives.

For instance, some of our team members from other generations prefer more structured hours, so we accommodate these by giving them the freedom to work within a specific framework of when and how long they can work. This keeps the whole team engaged, productive, and set up to meet the business goals.

The challenge comes with different kinds of expectations and keeping people connected, but open communication and some clear guidelines always really seem to help us find a nice middle ground.

Richard Dukas – DLPR

DLPR moved to a hybrid model in 2020, and it remains a core asset of our culture today. In a recent survey, our team members across generations highlighted flexibility as one of the things they appreciate most about the agency.

Anecdotally, our Gen Z employees value the collaboration and learning experiences fostered by their time in the office, so we work to make sure it’s a welcoming and productive environment.

When teammates are trusted to get their work done, whether that’s in the office, at home, or in a remote location, they are motivated to deliver their best thinking and highest quality results.

One particularly well-received policy allows all employees based in our New York City headquarters to work fully remotely for up to four weeks per year. From California to Ireland to the U.S. Virgin Islands, our team has enthusiastically embraced this opportunity, and productivity has remained consistently strong.

Jackie Churchwell
Co-Founder & CEO, Gratia

Jackie Churchwell – Gratia

At Gratia, flexibility isn’t just a perk—it’s foundational to our model.

With Gen Z prioritizing autonomy and purpose, we’ve architected a managed marketplace that offers these analysts remote, project-based opportunities tailored to their skill level, career aspirations and schedule.

Using AI to scope and match talent, our platform enables analysts—regardless of geography—to work asynchronously, choose engagements aligned with their strengths, and earn more as they upskill.

We believe this structure accommodates Gen Z’s preference for flexible work without compromising on quality.

For clients, it ensures continuity and output through structured mentorship and real-time oversight. Balancing generational needs is easier when flexibility is baked into the platform, not bolted on.

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.

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The DEI Fade: Leaders Share Impacts of Pulling Back

The DEI Fade: Leaders Share Impacts of Pulling Back

As some organizations dial back their Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) programs, the potential consequences for workplace dynamics, employee morale, and organizational success are coming into sharp focus.

Driven by financial pressures, shifting strategic priorities, or external influences, these reductions have ignited discussions about their broader implications.

We asked DEI experts, HR, and business leaders:

What are the possible outcomes of scaling back DEI initiatives?

Their responses highlight significant risks, including eroded trust, diminished innovation, talent attrition, and reputational challenges.

Yet, they also point to opportunities for organizations to reimagine DEI efforts with greater focus and sustainability.

In a world where authenticity and inclusivity are increasingly non-negotiable for employees and customers, these leaders underscore the importance of strategic, intentional approaches to preserve DEI progress.

Explore their expert insights below to uncover the risks, opportunities, and actionable strategies for navigating the complex terrain of DEI in today’s evolving workplaces.

Read on!

Ericka Prentice

Let me begin by saying real change is never lasting if it’s based on the horror or sensation surrounding one event. The reasoning behind most of these initiatives was flawed at best and designed to alleviate white guilt.

Let’s be honest, backs were up against the wall after George Floyd because it was blatant and played in constant rotation. We’ve never had a problem with the killing of BIPOC people in this country. In fact, we’re a country that makes lynching postcards, burns a pregnant black woman, cuts her baby from her belly and stomps it to death. George Floyd was a routine lynching.

However, the world knew that Black America was not going to let this just go away and it was watching. The pressure was on and companies had to respond one way or the other.

DEI, the way most companies engaged with and implemented it felt performative at best. It did not and was not ever designed to address structural or systemic issues.

We have never been willing to have those conversations in America. We would rather maintain the comfort of particular groups than address the real needs of marginalized groups.

The companies that are stepping away were never committed to real change, only change that was going to keep them from losing money and their consumer base. They were never interested in doing the hard work or having the tough conversations or truly learning what it’s like to be a part of a marginalized group in this country or in their workplaces. They will say they were, but they lie, period.

This is why I do what I do. In my mind, teaching leaders how to incorporate mindfulness tools in their everyday lives is crucial.

When we teach leaders how to communicate mindfully, to understand aggressive language, how to listen and hold mindful meetings, we create leaders that are more inclusive, more compassionate and engage more meaningfully with their teams. In turn, their teams are more productive and experience genuine psychological safety.

We should’ve begun with mindfulness training prior to leaping into DEI initiatives. Mindfulness tools, and I’m talking beyond just breathwork and meditation, change lives, create better leaders and create better teams.

Dr. Laurie Cure

The current legal and regulatory landscape around DEI is certainly testing organizational agility and stamina. At the present time, I think companies are watching the legal volley around the issues and approaching it with caution, despite often believing and wanting to further the underlying intention of supporting greater representation, fairness and cultures of belonging.

In direct response to the question, organizations that have reduced their DEI initiatives have experienced pushback from consumers and employees alike. Sales, employee retention, reputation and supplier relationships have been negatively impacted by many of the companies that have aggressively moved away from DEI practices.

For organizations whose mission, vision and values are tightly aligned to inclusion, representation and fairness, DEI practices are more critical to them and their customer base. Eliminating or changing these practices has more significant implications.

DEI’s purpose is obviously threefold: ensure a workforce represented by individuals with various backgrounds, a focus on fairness with organizational practices, and creation of an environment where everyone feels respected, valued and empowered.

While underrepresented is often interpreted by race, it more often includes gender, individuals with disabilities, veterans and those who have served in our armed forces, as well as their spouses, LGBTQ, lower socioeconomic and/or educational backgrounds or certain age groups.

DEI is expansive and recognizes that human nature is flawed and biased and seeks to put structures in place that minimize those tendencies so everyone has a fair and equal opportunity. It is not designed to punish certain people who are more deserving or qualified than others, but rather, expand opportunities so everyone who is (or could be) qualified has an equal opportunity to be seen.

Tampering down on DEI practices risks stifling current and future talent and undermining a company’s own ability to compete and achieve higher levels of performance both individually and as organizations.

Ultimately, without focus and emphasis, we revert to old patterns of underrepresentation and we know that often leads to lower business performance. We also know from current research that most employees want diversity, equity and inclusion in their workplaces.

While there might be disagreement around specific practices, employees and leaders desire cultures that embrace diversity, fairness and belonging (call it what you will). Turnover, engagement, innovative thinking, and toxic workplace behavior, are all at risk with declining emphasis on these efforts.

I also think it is important that we continue to understand the difference between DEI and affirmative action. While there are some areas of overlap, most companies we work with (many who operate across the globe) are maintaining DEI efforts (although they might be calling them something different) and more closely examining affirmative action strategies, which often.

What is often more interesting to me is looking at those organizations that have elected not to move away from DEI practices.

They are staying within the law by eliminating quotas and race-based preferences, but they are maintaining (and growing) a commitment to language, DEI-specific programs, employee resource groups, inclusive hiring practices and benefits packages, and community engagement, which fosters diversity and inclusion.

Sahara Rose De Vore

Companies claim that company culture and wellbeing are part of their core values yet, scaling back on DEI programs speaks otherwise.

In order to promote a happier and healthier workplace, there needs to be diversity. To build compassion, empathy, acceptance, and understanding amongst coworkers, which in turn, boosts company culture, there needs to be diversity in cultures, abilities, genders, ages, etc.

This is because we are all different as human beings. Through interactions, conversations, and time spent with people who are different from yourself, your understanding and empathy for others builds.

Companies need good company culture to succeed. People need to feel understood, accepted, and trusted to perform well, to exercise their creative juices, and to be motivated.

Without a diverse workplace, employees will struggle to see new perspectives and lack care for team work, ultimately hurting the company itself.

Jamie Graceffa
HR Executive, Kind Cards

Jamie Graceffa

As DEI initiatives come under increasing scrutiny, HR professionals are being called to reimagine how we uphold psychological safety, build employee engagement, and nurture an inclusive culture—without compromising compliance or values. One powerful, unifying solution is kindness.

Kindness is not a soft skill—it’s a strategic one. It offers a human-centered bridge that helps preserve the essence of DEI, especially in climates where traditional approaches are being scaled back. Far from being politically charged, kindness strengthens trust, reduces conflict, and improves team dynamics. It reinforces inclusion and well-being while delivering measurable outcomes like stronger retention, improved performance, and a more meaningful employee experience.

Without DEI initiatives, the foundation of a healthy workplace culture begins to crack. Trust erodes, morale drops, and creativity is stifled. One-note thinking limits innovation, while unchecked bias opens the door to exclusion and toxicity. The consequences aren’t just cultural—they’re business-critical.

Intentional kindness in the workplace isn’t just a feel-good practice—it’s a catalyst for belonging, resilience, and long-term success.

Mark Sanchez

We believe in fostering an inclusive environment where everyone feels welcome and represented—but we also believe the long-term success of any organization depends on a foundation of merit.

Scaling back DEI entirely risks alienating valuable voices, but overcorrecting can dilute the focus on performance and accountability.

The most sustainable approach is one that opens the door for everyone, then lets ability, work ethic, and results guide growth. Inclusion and merit don’t have to compete—they work best when they’re aligned.

Barbara Marzari
Communication & Engagement Strategy Director, Sociabble

Barbara Marzari

In the past few years, DEI programs have built more engaged, creative, and productive workplaces. So naturally, companies risk losing talent and weakening the morale and overall company performance if they pull back on DEI efforts.

From my experience helping entrepreneurs build their reputations, it is clear that inclusivity is a necessity today. If companies ignore DEI, they will surely see a decline in employee satisfaction, especially among underrepresented groups who feel that their voices are no longer being heard or valued. This could become costly both financially and in terms of brand equity.

Moreover, the young generation focuses on inclusivity and wishes their employer to do the same. So, scaling back DEI efforts could damage a company’s reputation in the eyes of potential hires as well. Once a company is seen as backward in DEI, it will struggle to attract top talent. This will become a bigger issue in creative industries where diversity brings innovation and performance.

DEI initiatives definitely demand effort and investment. However, such effort and investment are very small compared to the kind of reputation they build in the longer run. DEI builds a resilient and expanding company culture, and scaling it back would also pull back the progress companies have made.

So, how you decide to navigate through this as an organization is really going to matter.

Corina Tham
Finance & Sales Director, CheapForexVPS

Corina Tham

Reducing DEI efforts might influence the inclusiveness and equity within organizations. From my standpoint, particularly in fields like trading, varied viewpoints are essential for driving innovation and making sound decisions.

Pulling back on equity and inclusion could limit the diversity of ideas and hinder creativity in addressing challenges. Since trading relies heavily on examining different market trends and patterns, diverse teams are better positioned to tackle issues from various perspectives.

Businesses may also risk losing top talent who prioritize inclusive work cultures, which could impact overall outcomes. Furthermore, minimizing DEI initiatives might damage a company’s reputation, a key factor in client-focused industries like trading.

In my view, fostering diversity doesn’t just uplift individuals but also enhances the collective achievements of the team.

Ushmana Rai

Pulling back from DEI efforts may provide short-term relief or savings, but in the end, it is a retreat, not only in terms of culture but also competition.

Here’s how:

The Drain on Talent is Real: A large number of today’s workforce, especially the younger generations, look for an inclusive and equitable working environment. Any move that goes backward in DEI creates discontent among diverse talent and sends them out with the feeling that belongingness can be negotiated. This will gradually eat away at innovation and retention.

The Reputation is at Stake: Companies now that are letting DEI stand a step down may be branded as mostly performative. Today’s consumers and stakeholders are so values-led that silence and reversals do not go unnoticed.

Missed-Out Business Growth: A lot of studies have associated diverse teams with better decision-making and increased profits. It is not only a moral failure to scale back DEI but also a failed business strategy.

The Alternative? Refocus, Don’t Retreat: Instead of abandoning DEI, organizations should evolve it by integrating it into core strategies, leadership pipelines, and customer experience. That is the only way that true equity grows, quite, deep.

Karen Cosentino

At Barge, our commitment to fostering an inclusive culture remains steadfast, independent of external policy changes.

We believe that diversity of thought, background, and experience drives innovation, strengthens our teams, and enhances the solutions we deliver. Rather than reacting to policy shifts, we remain focused on what has always been important to us—creating a workplace where all employees feel valued and empowered.

Candidates seek out companies that value inclusivity and professional growth. By focusing on the best talent for the role, we have seen steady increases in representation, particularly in areas where the AEC industry has historically had a higher percentage of men.

Employees are drawn to workplaces where they feel valued and have opportunities to connect. Our employee-led groups and professional development programs provide meaningful engagement beyond daily work, creating a stronger sense of community. We also believe that offering access to a variety of assignments generates an environment where innovation can prosper.

A culture of inclusion is built through daily actions, leadership commitment, and opportunities for connection. HR leadership serves as a resource to leadership and an advocate for employees, playing an important role in connecting all employees. Supporting the creation of employee-led groups or community-sponsored events builds connection and, subsequently, community.

Liam Perkins
Digital Marketing Manager, Privr

Liam Perkins

Scaling back DEI efforts isn’t just a step backward, it’s a full-blown trust fall with no one to catch marginalized employees. Let’s be real: DEI isn’t a “phase” you sunset after hitting a quota. When companies treat it like a trend, they signal that inclusion was performative, not foundational.

For brands like Privr, which exist to uplift LGBTQ+ communities, DEI isn’t optional, it’s the DNA. Gutting these initiatives risks alienating both talent and users who crave authenticity. Imagine a dating app that stops prioritizing queer safety features, trust evaporates overnight.

The anticipated outcome is a decline in creativity.

Homogeneous teams recycle ideas, while diverse teams spark innovation. Without intentional DEI, companies lose their edge in understanding nuanced markets, like Gen Z, who demand brands walk the inclusivity talk.

Plus, backsliding invites PR fires: employees and consumers will call out hypocrisy. Long-term, it’s a talent drain, marginalized folks flee environments where they’re an afterthought. DEI isn’t a cost center, it’s the ROI of relevance.

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

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