The concept of belonging, like the other components of DEIB (diversity, equity, and inclusion), has suffered lately from definition creep and ambiguity. Belonging has a specific definition, representing a sense of acceptance, inclusion, and identity as a member of a specific group. Belonging is the idea that you have enough security and support in the workplace to be yourself – and to thrive while doing so.
We often talk about equity and inclusion, but belonging deserves its own space in a workplace strategy aiming to create connectedness among all employees – especially those who previously felt marginalized.
Although a related concept, belonging isn’t the same as inclusion. Here are a few major differences between these two concepts:
When I talk to organizations that genuinely want to create a listening program, they ask how they can build a reliable framework that will track DEIB measures accurately. It’s definitely not a one-size-fits-all situation, but here are a few best practices that should drive strong results in the field:
Measuring belonging can’t be seen merely as a “DEIB initiative” – it’s a core measure that can predict future success. Research shows that workplaces with high measures of belonging demonstrate a 56% increase in job performance, 50% drop in turnover risk, and a 75% reduction in sick days. For a 10,000-person company that works out to an annual savings of $52 million.
The future of belonging measurement depends not just on asking the right questions, but asking them often and consistently through a regular listening program. In the ideal program, a mature company will devote resources to a listening plan that includes belonging as a regularly measured indicator. You should measure it across all employees while paying special attention to traditionally marginalized groups like people of color or internal groups that previously had low belonging scores.
A thoughtful action plan, designed to “raise all boats” of belonging, can prove to be the difference between reversing a belonging deficit or seeing a negative turn overwhelm the company culture. By working with a partner like Perceptyx, you can ensure that belonging belongs in your DEIB strategy by developing and tracking the right metrics to understand your employee experience and drive continuous improvement over time.
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