To recruit top talent, New Zealand organisations need to ‘walk the talk’ and develop recruitment strategies to build
truly diverse workforces.
Shay Peters, New Zealand Director of leading recruitment firm Robert Walters, says that more needs to be done to
acknowledge the benefits of diversity and prevent discrimination in the workforce.
Robert Walters’ Embracing Difference: How to recruit, retain and empower a diverse workforce research released today
shows that 82 percent of respondents believe discrimination still exists in today’s workplace.
Although senior management talk about the importance of diversity it often isn’t implemented across the organisation.
Of those surveyed, 36 percent said the benefits of diversity weren’t fully understood by their organisation’s senior
management and 53 percent were unaware of their organisation’s diversity strategy, if one exists at all.
Robert Walters New Zealand director Shay Peters says: “Organisations need positive role models and leaders who embrace
diversity, inspire others to follow, and are aware of where discrimination can occur,” he says.
The report shows that diversity positively impacts staff engagement, skill development, creativity and innovation, and
the bottom line.
“It’s commonsense in many ways – people want to work in an engaging and interesting workplace and diversity plays a big
part in this. Businesses need to step up and modernise their recruitment strategies to actively pursue diversity.”
The survey shows the number one obstacle that prevents an organisation from achieving diversity is when managers hire
like-minded people instead of a diverse mix. The next most common is employers failing to identify or manage unconscious
bias.
The three most common ways discrimination is experienced or observed are in the hiring process, remuneration and career
development, according to the research.
Another area the survey explores is gender diversity, with research showing that fewer men than women were aware of the
gender pay gap that exists in New Zealand.
“Gender diversity is key at all levels of an organisation. There is plenty that organisations can be doing to
facilitate diverse workforces, such as creating flexible working practices and implementing career progression
strategies,"” says Peters.
“We challenge organisations to work towards an inclusive, balanced workforce. Organisations must look at where they are
in their diversity journey, develop a strategic approach to retain and empower a diverse workforce, and most importantly
put the strategy in to action,” said Peters.
Respondents said the top three most impactful strategies to address workforce diversity are recruitment processes to
mitigate unconscious bias, flexible working arrangements for parents, and a diversity strategy that is clearly and
widely communicated to everyone.
To review the whitepaper please visit:
https://www.robertwalters.co.nz/content/dam/robert-walters/country/new-zealand/files/whitepapers/Embracing%20Difference_NZ.pdf