Inclusion isn’t a one-time initiative or a single program—it’s a continuous commitment that must be embedded across every stage of the employee lifecycle. By taking deliberate steps, organizations can create workplaces where all employees feel valued, respected, and empowered to succeed. Here’s how we can make a meaningful impact at each stage: 1. Attract Build inclusive employer branding and equitable hiring practices. Ensure job postings use inclusive language and focus on skills rather than unnecessary credentials. Broaden recruitment pipelines by partnering with diverse professional organizations, schools, and networks. Showcase your commitment to inclusion in external messaging with employee stories that reflect diversity. 2. Recruit Eliminate bias and promote fair candidate evaluation. Use structured interviews and standardized evaluation rubrics to reduce bias. Train recruiters and hiring managers on unconscious bias and inclusive hiring practices. Implement blind resume reviews or AI tools to focus on qualifications, not identifiers. 3. Onboard Create an inclusive onboarding experience. Design onboarding materials that reflect a diverse workplace culture. Pair new hires with mentors or buddies from Employee Resource Groups (ERGs) to foster belonging. Offer inclusion training early to set the tone for inclusivity from day one. 4. Develop Provide equitable opportunities for growth. Ensure leadership programs and career development resources are accessible to underrepresented employees. Regularly review training, mentorship, and promotion programs to address any disparities. Offer specific development opportunities, such as allyship training or workshops on cultural competency. 5. Engage Foster a culture of inclusion. Actively listen to employee feedback through pulse surveys, focus groups, and open forums. Support ERGs and create platforms for marginalized voices to influence organizational policies. Recognize and celebrate diverse perspectives, cultures, and contributions in the workplace. 6. Retain Address barriers to equity and belonging. Conduct pay equity audits and address discrepancies to ensure fairness. Create flexible policies that accommodate diverse needs, including caregiving responsibilities, religious practices, and accessibility. Provide regular inclusion updates to build trust and demonstrate progress. 7. Offboard Learn and grow from employee transitions. Use exit interviews to uncover potential inequities and areas for improvement. Analyze trends in attrition to identify and address any patterns of exclusion or bias. Maintain relationships with alumni and invite them to stay engaged through inclusive networks. Embedding inclusion across the employee lifecycle is not just the right thing to do—it’s a strategic imperative that drives innovation, engagement, and organizational success. By making these steps intentional, companies can create environments where everyone can thrive.
Strategies for Tech Talent Retention
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The lesson I take from so many dispersed teams I’ve worked with over the years is that great collaboration is not about shrinking the distance. It is about deepening the connection. Time zones, language barriers, and cultural nuances make working together across borders uniquely challenging. I see these dynamics regularly: smart, dedicated people who care deeply about their work but struggle to truly see and understand one another. One of the tools I often use in my work with global teams is the Harvard Business School case titled Greg James at Sun Microsystems. It tells the story of a manager leading a 45-person team spread across the U.S., France, India, and the UAE. When a major client system failed, the issue turned out not to be technical but human. Each location saw the problem differently. Misunderstandings built up across time zones. Tensions grew between teams that rarely met in person. What looked like a system failure was really a connection failure. What I find powerful about this story, and what I see mirrored in so many organizations today, is that the path forward is about rethinking how we create connection, trust, and fairness across distance. It is not where many leaders go naturally: new tools or tighter control. Here are three useful practices for dispersed teams to adopt. (1) Create shared context, not just shared goals. Misalignment often comes from not understanding how others work, not what they’re working on. Try brief “work tours,” where teams explain their daily realities and constraints. Context builds empathy, and empathy builds speed. (2) Build trust through reflection, not just reliability. Trust deepens when people feel seen and understood. After cross-site collaborations, ask: “What surprised you about how others see us?” That simple reflection can transform relationships. (3) Design fairness into the system. Uneven meeting times, visibility, or opportunities quickly erode respect. Rotate schedules, celebrate behind-the-scenes work, and make sure recognition travels across time zones. Fairness is a leadership design choice, not a nice-to-have. Distance will always be part of global work, but disconnection doesn’t have to be. When leaders intentionally design for shared understanding, reflected trust, and structural fairness, I've found, distributed teams flourish. #collaboration #global #learning #leadership #connection Case here: https://lnkd.in/eZfhxnGW
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We're building connection wrong. After years of forcing people back to offices for "water cooler moments," I quizzed Atlassian's Chief People Officer Avani Solanki Prabhakar on How I Work about what she discovered actually creates workplace connection – and it's not what most leaders think. They call it "Intentional Togetherness" (ITG). And this what Avani told me: sporadic office attendance doesn't build connection. You can't manufacture connection by hoping people bump into each other at the coffee machine. **What actually works** Every quarter, bring cross-functional teams together with one rule: they must solve a real strategic problem. Not your hierarchical teams. Not a fun team-building exercise. The actual humans who need to crack a specific challenge. Give them: - A meaty problem that matters - Time to work through it together - Permission to get stuck, struggle, and figure it out The magic isn't in the solution. It's in the struggle. Think about your strongest work relationships. I bet they weren't forged over casual Friday drinks. They were built when you were both knee-deep in a project that felt impossible, working late, cursing the complexity, but figuring it out together. "Remember when we were doing that project together and it was so shitty?" That's the phrase that signals real connection. Shared struggle creates stronger bonds than a thousand coffee chats. **Here's what this means for you** Stop trying to engineer serendipity. Start engineering challenges. If you're mandating office days hoping for magical collaboration, you're wasting everyone's time. Instead, identify your biggest strategic challenges and bring together the people who can solve them. Make it quarterly. Make it intentional. Make it matter. Listen to the full chat on How I Work: https://lnkd.in/gMtw_Ecp And tell me in the comments: how does your team approach building togetherness? What works? What doesn't? #WorkplaceCulture #Leadership #OrganisationalPsychology #RemoteWork #FutureOfWork
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If we want more women in tech, we need to stop asking how to “fix women’s confidence”. The real question is: what are organisations doing to create environments where women can thrive? Through my work with #techmums, #TechUPWomen, BCSWomen , and the Women in Tech Power Network I’ve seen so many women move into tech careers and flourish when the environment around them supports them. Time and again I’ve watched incredibly capable women step into their potential once they’re in workplaces where they are welcomed, supported and given real opportunities. So what can companies do? A few things that make a genuine difference: 🌟 Leadership must lead. Culture comes from the top. CEOs and CTOs need to actively champion inclusive workplaces. 🌟 Create strong communities and networks where women can connect and support each other. 🌟 Invest in mentoring and sponsorship that opens doors to opportunities and leadership. 🌟 Make career progression transparent so promotion pathways are fair and visible. 🌟 Listen to women’s experiences and act on what you hear. Inclusive cultures don’t happen by accident. They happen because leaders choose to build them. And when they do, the impact on people, organisations and innovation is extraordinary. #LinkedInNewsEurope #WomenInTech TechUP Programme BCSWomen Women in Tech Power Network #Leadership #Inclusion #IWD #IWD26
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Do you feel part of a real team? Or are there moments when you feel isolated, uncertain, and disconnected, even though you're surrounded by colleagues? In the early stages of my career, I had the simplistic view that bringing together a bunch of high achievers would naturally create an outstanding team. However, the reality was quite different. Instead of creating synergy, there was noticeable discord. The team didn't seem to gel; it was akin to cogs not aligning in a machine. Every top performer, exceptional in their own right, appeared to follow their own path, often pulling in different directions. The amount of energy and time lost to internal strife was significant, and the expected outcomes? They remained just that – expected. This experience was a clear lesson that the success of a team isn't merely based on individual talent; it's about harmony, alignment, and collaboration. With today’s workplaces being more diverse, widespread, digitized, and ever-changing, achieving this is certainly challenging. So, in my quest to understand the nuances of high-performing teams, I reached out to my friend Hari Haralambiev. As a coach of dev teams who care about people, Hari has worked with numerous tech organizations, guiding them to unlock their teams’ potential. Here are his top 5 tips for developing high performing teams: 1. Be Inclusive ↳Put a structure in place so that the most vocal people don’t suffocate the silent voices. Great teams make sure minority views are heard and taken into account. They make it safe for people to speak up. 2. Leverage Conflict ↳Disagreements should be encouraged and how you handle them is what makes your team poor or great. Great teams mine for conflict - they cherish disagreements. To handle disagreements properly make sure to separate discussion from decision. 3. Decision Making Process ↳Have a clear team decision-making method to resolve conflicts quickly. The most important decision a team should make is how to make decisions. Don’t look for 100% agreement. Look for 100% commitment. 4. Care and Connect ↳This is by far the most important tip. Teams who are oriented only on results are not high-performing. You need to create psychological safety and build trust between people. To do that - focus on actually knowing the other people and to make it safe to be vulnerable in front of others. Say these 4 phrases more often: ‘I don’t know’, ‘I made a mistake’, ‘I’m sorry’, ‘I need help’. 5. Reward experimentation and risk taking ↳No solution is 100% certain. People should feel safe to take risks and make mistakes. Reward smart failure. Over-communicate that it’s better to take action and take accountability than play it safe. Remember, 'team' isn't just a noun—it's a verb. It requires ongoing effort and commitment to work at it, refine it, and nurture it. Do give Hari a follow and join over 6K+ professionals who receive his leadership comics in his newsletter A Leader’s Tale.
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Building stronger workplace relationships is easier than you think. Here's what actually works (after 10+ years in team management): 1️⃣ Start with genuine curiosity - Ask about their projects - Listen more than you speak - Remember personal details they share 2️⃣ Create connection points - Schedule regular coffee chats - Join or start team activities - Offer help before they ask 3️⃣ Practice professional empathy - Acknowledge their challenges - Celebrate their wins (big and small) - Be reliable with commitment 4️⃣ Foster open communication - Share knowledge freely - Give credit where it's due - Address issues directly, but kindly 5️⃣ Respect boundaries - Keep work conversations professional - Don't force social interactions - Honor their time and space The key? Consistency in these actions. These aren't just "nice to have" practices. They're essential for creating a workplace where everyone thrives. Remember: Strong workplace relationships aren't built overnight. But small, daily actions make a huge difference. Try these today. Your future self (and team) will thank you. 📌 Share if you know someone who could use these tips P.S. Which of these will you try first? Drop a comment below. #employees #workplace #team
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You can’t demand loyalty. You can’t buy it. You can’t shortcut it. You earn it through tiny actions repeated consistently. And when leaders miss those moments, they lose the people who matter most — often without even realising it. Because loyalty isn’t built in bonuses, titles, or flashy culture programs. It’s built in the small, human moments your team feels every day. The ones you think don’t matter… but matter the most. And that’s where leadership breaks down. Not with bad strategy. But with quiet neglect. Here are the tiny things that silently build loyalty stronger than any engagement initiative you could design: 10 Tiny Gestures That Build Massive Loyalty 1️⃣ Remember the small things ↳ Birthdays. Family moments. Life outside work. ↳ Being seen matters more than being managed. 2️⃣ Say “thank you” — properly ↳ Not generic. Not rushed. ↳ Specific, sincere recognition builds pride. 3️⃣ Ask “How are you… really?” ↳ Most leaders ask the question but never hold the space. ↳ Your team knows the difference. 4️⃣ Give credit loudly. Take blame quietly. ↳ Your people judge you faster by your behaviour under pressure than by any speech about culture. 5️⃣ Keep the small promises ↳ You can’t ask for trust while breaking tiny commitments. 6️⃣ Guard their time ↳ If everything is urgent, nothing is meaningful. ↳ Respecting time is respecting people. 7️⃣ Celebrate progress, not just wins ↳ Momentum builds performance. ↳ People stay when they feel momentum with you. 8️⃣ Admit when you’re wrong ↳ Humility is a leadership superpower. ↳ It earns loyalty instantly. 9️⃣ Make space for quiet voices ↳ Loud doesn’t equal valuable. ↳ Your best ideas often come from the ones who speak last. 🔟 Lead with consistency ↳ Predictability builds safety. ↳ Your team should never have to guess which version of you is walking in today. Here’s what I’ve learned coaching leaders: 👉 Loyalty is never built in the big moments. 👉 It’s built in the tiny moments you think no one notices. 👉 And those moments determine who stays, who grows, and who gives you their best. The small things aren’t small. They’re the difference. What’s one tiny gesture from a leader you still remember to this day? ♻ Share this with your network if it resonates. ☝ And follow Stuart Andrews for more insights like this.
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If you're setting goals to create a more inclusive workplace in 2025, my experience may save you time, money, and unmet expectations. ✅ Quick Wins (low effort, high impact) Start with team psychological safety. Inclusion is felt most in everyday team interactions—meetings, feedback, problem-solving. 👇 Use tools like: 1. The Fearless Organization Scan to uncover blind spots and team dynamics. 2. Debrief session with an accredited facilitator to discuss results openly and set clear, actionable improvements. 3. Action plan with small shifts in behavior, like leaders modeling vulnerability, asking for input first, or establishing "speak-up norms" in meetings. These micro-actions quickly build team inclusion and unlock collaboration. 🏗️ Big Projects (high effort, high impact): To create sustainable change, invest in structural inclusion. 👇 Focus on: 1. Inclusive hiring & promotion practices: build diverse candidate pipelines and train interviewers on bias mitigation. 2. Inclusive decision-making: ensure diverse perspectives are integrated into key business decisions. 3. Inclusive leadership: train leaders to actively foster diverse perspectives, intellectual humility, and trust in their teams. Empower leaders to align inclusion with business goals and make it part of their day-to-day behavior. 🎉 Fill-ins (low effort, low impact): Awareness events (like diversity month) are great for building visibility but should educate, not just celebrate. 👇 For example: 1. Pair cultural events with workshops on how diverse values shape workplace communication. 2. Use storytelling to highlight how diverse perspectives lead to tangible business wins. 🚩 Thankless Tasks (high effort, low impact): Avoid resource-heavy initiatives with little ROI. 👇 Examples: 1. Overcomplicated dashboards: focus on 2–3 actionable metrics rather than endless reports that don’t lead to change. 2. Unstructured ERGs: without clear goals and leadership support, these often become frustrating rather than empowering. 3. One-off training programs: A two-day training on unconscious bias without follow-up or practical tools is a missed opportunity. 💡 Key Takeaways 1. Inclusion thrives where it’s felt daily—in teams and decisions. 2. Start with quick wins to build momentum and tackle big projects for systemic change. 3. Avoid symbolic efforts that consume resources without measurable outcomes. 🚀 Let’s turn inclusion into a tangible, strategic advantage that empowers your teams to thrive in 2025 and beyond. _____________________________________________ If you're new here, I’m Susanna—an accredited team psychological safety practitioner with over a decade of experience in DEI and inclusive leadership. I partner with forward-thinking companies to create inclusive, high-performing workplaces where teams thrive. 📩 DM me or visit www if you want to prioritize what truly works for your organization.
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Good news: Malaysia’s latest pulse data shows employers and markets still creating opportunities—and firms are investing in experience and skills alongside growth. That’s a rare, useful balance. Source: (link in comment) However, growth without skills is fragile. If companies scale without reskilling, onboarding and engagement suffer. So treat skills work as culture work. If you’re launching a growth push, pair it with an explicit skills path: who will teach, where the learning happens, and how progress is visible. Action plan (simple): when approving any new project or headcount, require a 1-page Skills & Onboarding plan: who mentors, first 30/60/90 milestones, and one metric to check after three months. Make those plans public within the team. When you name development responsibility and make progress visible, engagement follows. Good jobs are one thing. Good jobs where people grow and belong — that’s culture. Build both.
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