Paulette Cohen – An Experienced and Inspiring Diversity & Inclusion Leader Aiming To Create An Equal And Safe Work Environment
The 10 Most Influential D&I Leaders, 2022
Paulette Cohen is the Head of Diversity & Inclusion, UK,
Europe, Middle East at Barclays. She is experienced in working at a strategic
level in both the corporate and charitable sectors to deliver national and
global initiatives that lead to social change. Responsible for developing and
delivering campaigns within Barclays diversity and inclusion strategy, Paulette
also has lead responsibility for the disability agenda and ‘This is Me’ mental
health campaign across Barclays globally.
Being established as a D&I leader now, Paulette says she
has had some extraordinary opportunities throughout her career. Her background
was in marketing and communications in the not-for-profit sector – including
being the Communications Director for Save the Children. However, her
experience in international development took her to the Barclays citizenship
team where she led partnerships focusing on women’s economic empowerment, and
youth employability programmes for those from lower socio-economic backgrounds
and under-represented communities. “These are, of course, strong foundations
aligned to diversity pillars so my experience was eminently transferable to the
world of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion,” she states.
Every leader has a
unique definition of success
Paulette’s personal perspective of success is when she can
go home at the end of the day and feel that someone’s life has been made just a
little better by something she has done – that could be a decision she’s made,
or a conversation she has had. She feels this is, perhaps, a little idealistic,
however she says that it has held true throughout her career and will continue
to shape her approach as a DEI leader in the future.
“I very much feel that as DEI professionals we have to use
influence to affect change and a successful result is when we have
thoughtfully, but intently, nudged people towards an outcome that can truly
have a positive impact the lives of others,” she says. From a business angle,
she feels success is about taking the decisions that will secure the best
outcomes – for the company, the people who work in it, and the communities it
serves.
Challenges can be
stepping stones to success
The importance of the work done in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
increases every day, and the expectations to build an inclusive and equitable
workplace are greater than ever. Changing demographics and the demand for the
very best talent pose new challenges. And key stakeholders, including
investors, regulators, clients and employees are looking for tangible impact
and evidence of progress as an indicator of organizational resilience and long
term sustainability. It’s part of the increasing emphasis on the ‘social’
component of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) goals.
“Challenges we face can include a lack of understanding
about the business case for DEI, and the expectations for swift solutions to
achieve cultural change. I’ve learnt that it is vital to present the business
imperative for DEI as well as acknowledge that it is a strong agent for social
change. We also need to help people understand there are no quick solutions for
building an open and inclusive workplace and that we must take a long-term
approach. However, there are milestones we can set along the way and we need to
be transparent in the progress we are making,” explains Paulette.
Barclays and its
services under Paulette’s leadership
Barclays is committed to building a supportive and inclusive
culture where people of all backgrounds are represented, feel they belong and
can bring their whole selves to work. They recognize that being a diverse and
inclusive company is an integral part of their success, and this success is
built on their ability to listen to, and understand, a variety of perspectives
and embrace diversity enabling the business to provide the best service to
their customers and clients.
As a company, they focus on six intersectional agendas –
Disability, Gender, LGBT+, Multicultural, Multigenerational, Socio-economic
inclusion. “I have a double brief” says Paulette “I am responsible for driving
Diversity, Equity and Inclusion across all of the agendas and business units within
the UK, Europe and the Middle East. I also have the global brief for our
disability agenda, which has the vision for Barclays to become one of the most
accessible and inclusive companies.”
Paulette’s
contribution in redefining diversity and inclusion at Barclays
Barclays has had a long-term commitment to DEI, and building
an equitable and inclusive culture. However, diversity and inclusion strategies
are constantly evolving and hence they need to be refreshed as the approach
becomes more mature. Barclays has become more business-focused, and also more
targeted in meeting the needs of their diverse colleagues and the communities
they serve.
Paulette gives two recent examples:
- We have increased
transparency and accountability – in 2020 we launched an Inclusion Index
to monitor year on year improvements, along with a personal inclusion
objective embedded in every colleague’s annual work plan.
- We have also evolved our
colleague engagement survey to become much more granular, gathering
information across protected characteristics, to better understand the
views of our diverse communities. It means we can put in place targeted
support that levels the playing field for everyone to succeed, even though
they start from a different place. In February 2021, we launched our
inaugural D&I Annual Report sharing this information with investors
and other key stakeholders.
Paulette was also actively involved in scaling up a
Barclays-inspired campaign called ‘This is Me’, challenging the stigma of
mental health through the power of story- telling. Started by nine Barclays
colleagues, this has now been adopted by over 400 other companies across
regions in the UK and within Asia reaching millions of employees.
Influencing a
change in this generation as a D&I leader
DEI leaders have a responsibility, and the opportunity, to
shape the way the next generation value difference and see the strengths that
the many elements of an individual’s identity can bring. They know that diverse
teams and an inclusive approach lead to higher-performing, more resilient and
sustainable businesses, and a more empathetic and equitable society. The next
generation already appreciate this. “We see this as they embrace allyship,
wanting to learn about the lived experience of others and support them to unlock
their talents,” Paulette says.
At Barclays, there’s been a surge in the membership of their
Employee Resource Groups (over 25,000 members) and their associated allies
initiatives – Spectrum allies for the LGBT+ community, Reach Purple Champions
aligned to supporting those with a disability, mental health or neurodivergent
condition, and a large cohort of Male Allies who support gender equality
through the role they can play, both in and outside the workplace.
The best
recognition Paulette received as a D&I leader
“I should say that it was when I was awarded an MBE (Member
of the British Empire) by the Queen in the 2022 New Year’s Honours list for
services to diversity and inclusion and business,” says Paulette. She feels
that was recognition for the work of the incredible teams she’s been part of.
However, the recognition she most valued was seeing a colleague who had shared
her ‘This is Me’ story of her own mental health challenges be given an award.
“It’s the people on whose lives our DE&I work have an impact that really
deserve recognition and that make me incredibly proud,” she states.
Staying motivated
to maintain a work-life balance
Paulette does not see a huge division between her personal
and professional life, mainly because she feels that she works in a field where
her personal beliefs and commitments fill her working day. She states that the
ultimate goal for her is to enjoy what she does and feel it is making a really
positive contribution.
She is hugely motivated by the achievements of others, and
when a small change happens that can have a big impact. Paulette believes that celebrating
such successes as a team is a key motivator. Outside of work, she spends as
much time as she can walking her new puppy – she claims that it is a great
leveller and gives her time to reflect and recharge.
Key
responsibilities as the Head of Diversity & Inclusion
Paulette, describes herself as optimistic and says that her
days at work are multi-faceted – juggling inputs across the DEI portfolio
within the business, and supporting external interventions focused on
disability, mental health and neurodiversity.
There is no regular day, but it could include: embedding
gender and ethnicity ambitions into one of the DEI business councils;
contributing self-identification insights to the UK Government’s Disability
Confident scheme; chairing a national ‘This is Me’ steering group for the Lord
Mayor’s Appeal charity; working with Spectrum Barclays’ LGBT+ ERG to deliver
the Stonewall benchmark; holding a career coaching conversation with a graduate
to help them focus on their transferable skills. Paulette states that they all
would genuinely happen in one day!