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Saturday, November 21, 2009 Ayers Report Fall 2003   VOLUME 1 ISSUE 3  
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IN THIS ISSUE...
President's Letter
Ayers Initiatives Address Workplace Stress
College Day Program Gives Grads an Edge in the Market
From Sweats to Suits
Staffing Up—Where the Action Is
Ayers Enhances Resources for Research and Networking
Expanded Peak Performance Teams Offer Support, Motivation, Networking
Ayers, MENG Hold First Joint Meeting
Ayers Launches Seminar for Entrepreneurs
Successful Landings
OEC Consultant's Corner: Maximizing the ROI of Executive Coaching
OEC Sees Renewed Interest in Diversity
Staff Announcements
Robert Kelling – In Memoriam
AYERS REPORT

Editor in Chief: 
Joan Caruso

Writer: 
Catherine Carlozzi

Designer: 
Loan Tran

If you have questions or comments on this month's issue, send your feedback to loan.tran@ayers.com
OEC Sees Renewed Interest in Diversity

Joan Caruso
Managing Director
Tel:  212.889.7788
joan.caruso@ayers.com

The Organizational Effectiveness Consulting Group at Ayers has detected a reawakening of interest in diversity training. “Over the last few months, I’ve been getting at least a call a week,” says Joan Caruso, Managing Director of OEC.  The Ayers Report asked her about this trend.

Q:  What groups are the focus of interest?

"It’s a fairly even split between women and minorities, and the focus is most often on increasing their representation at the top of the house.  Major companies are coming to us and saying, ‘We can name all the women—or members of minority groups—at the top of our organization, there are so few.’  As someone whose HR career began in the late ‘70s, I find it interesting that this is becoming an issue again.  It’s amazing that in 2003 big companies can still make this statement.  And although they’re talking about it in terms of diversity, it’s really a talent-management issue."

Q:  Why talent management rather than diversity?

"Identifying candidates from these target groups is just the beginning.  The real focus needs to be on attracting and retaining them. Being a blue-chip company doesn’t automatically make you attractive to top female or minority candidates.  The factors that make you a good place to work for other populations might not carry the same weight.  You attract women and minorities through your organizational track record with regard to treatment of their peers, which is connected to how you retain them.

"I suggest you look at diversity as part of talent management, and think about identification, attraction, and retention as a unit.  You need to consider issues such as whether there are role models in your organization for them, whether you have mentoring and other kinds of development programs designed expressly for them, and whether you support the kinds of community activities that are important to them."


Q: 
The fact that women and minorities have other options these days must make retention even harder.

"More and more women—and men—have discovered that entrepreneurialism offers them more control over their time and lives, making it easier to achieve work-life balance.  In addition to having attractive alternatives, women and individuals from minorities who make it to the upper ranks tend to attract attention—and offers—from other companies. These are savvy people who have choices and will ask you tough questions."

Q:  What’s driving the reawakened interest in achieving diversity?

"There’s a growing need for organizations to recognize and adapt to major changes in the workplace caused by globalization, technology, and immigration—as well as the new demands these changes place on corporate leadership.  I’ve been asking clients where the pressure is coming from:  mostly from turnover at the board and senior management level.  As the new leadership comes in, it looks at the organization’s demographics and is surprised.  There are more women and minority members on boards these days, and younger people are moving up the ladder.  They want to see more people like themselves at the top of the organization.

"It’s an evolving trend and it remains to be seen how much depth it has, so stay tuned as we watch how it plays out."

 
The 2000 Census and corporate reputation surveys confirm that companies must be inclusive to succeed in the 21st century.  The Ayers Group partners with clients to design, develop, and implement an integrated approach to diversity.  Contact Joan Caruso at 212.889.7788 or
joan.caruso@ayers.com for more information.

[PRINTER FRIENDLY VERSION]



The OEC Consultant’s Corner section of our Website is a compilation of Consultant’s Corner articles from the Ayers Report.  As an experiment, we have translated one of the posted articles—“Emotional Intelligence” by Ayers consultant Dr. Benjamin Dattner—into Spanish.  We’re interested in your reaction. 

This is useful. I'd like to see other CCs translated into Spanish.

I'd like to see CC articles translated into Italian.

I'd like to see CC articles translated into French.

I'd like to see CC articles translated into Chinese.

ARTICLES BY TOPIC:
Ayers Update
President's Letter
Ayers Initiatives Address Workplace Stress
College Day Program Gives Grads an Edge in the Market
From Sweats to Suits
Robert Kelling – In Memoriam
Staff Announcements
Career Transition
Ayers Enhances Resources for Research and Networking
Expanded Peak Performance Teams Offer Support, Motivation, Networking
Ayers, MENG Hold First Joint Meeting
Ayers Launches Seminar for Entrepreneurs
Successful Landings
IT Staffing
Staffing Up—Where the Action Is
Organizational Effectiveness Consulting
OEC Sees Renewed Interest in Diversity
OEC Consultant's Corner: Maximizing the ROI of Executive Coaching
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