Lenora Billings-Harris: Helping Organizations Effectively Leverage Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in a Multicultural Workplace and Marketplace
Top 10 Most inspiring CEOs to Follow in 2024
In today’s complicated, dynamic, and varied
world, the more interconnected we appear to become, the more divided or
separated our societies appear to become. As a result, it is customary HR
policy to indicate an equal opportunity employer. While these phrases are
casually used in daily business jargon, actively embracing diversity, equity,
and inclusion in the workplace is critical for organizations to prosper.
Lenora Billings-Harris, CSP (Certified
Speaking Professional), is a CPAE Hall of Fame speaker and an expert on
inclusion, diversity, and bias. The Society of Human Resource Management (SHRM)
designated her one of the 100 Global Thought Leaders on Diversity and
Inclusion, and Diversity Woman Magazine named her one of the twenty most
significant diversity leaders in the United States. Her award-winning diverse
leadership studies have been published in academic publications all around the
world. She also serves on the Advisory Council of the Nido Qubein School of
Communication at High Point University and is an adjunct faculty at two
additional universities.
She has spoken in over 40 countries and on
six continents, and she recently keynoted the Inclusion Conferences in Cape
Town, South Africa and Tel Aviv, Israel to discuss best practices with leaders
in industry, government, education, and non-governmental organizations.
Billings-Harris is the co-author of
Trailblazers: How Top Business Leaders are Accelerating Results Through
Inclusion and Diversity, as well as the author of The Diversity Advantage: A
Guide to Making Diversity Work, 3rd Edition.
Real Meaning of Success
Lenora gauges her performance by her
customers’ results after she has worked with them to increase their awareness
of the benefits of a good DEI (diversity, equality, and inclusion) plan. When
it comes to DEI, she feels that good DEI leadership entails much more than
simply checking the box. Successful leaders recognize how difficult it is to
create an atmosphere in which team members and employees are accepted and
valued for their distinct viewpoints. They recognize that DEI is not a program,
but rather a way of being in their workplace culture. This takes far more than
simply attending a DEI workshop. Leaders must be introspective about their
biases and then take steps to disrupt prejudices that inhibit team
effectiveness. She asserts, “Inclusive leaders do their internal work
while they also support the organizational work to uncover and eliminate
inequities. They know that a DEI focus should be the responsibility of every
department, just as safety and expense management is.”
Becoming a Promising D&I Leader
Lenora did not establish her company over
thirty-five years ago with the intention of doing work in this field. Back
then, workplace diversity was beginning to gain momentum inside major firms,
but corporate diversity experts were forced to focus on compliance—EEO and
Affirmative Action. Despite their desire to accomplish more, many faced
burnouts owing to a lack of support. As a result, she chose to concentrate her
efforts on leadership development. However, following one of her trips to South
Africa, Lenora’s focus shifted. She shares, “I had a life-changing
experience that enabled me to see diversity and inclusion in a different way.
It was March 1994. Nelson Mandela would be elected president the next month. In
essence, at the end of a full-day leadership development workshop, an Afrikaner
woman walked up to me in tears. She said that when she arrived that morning and
saw that I, a black woman from America, was the facilitator, she wanted to
leave. She could not imagine what she could learn from me. However, at the end
of the day, she realized she needed to be there because she needed to
experience me as 100 percent human.” Lenora was not facilitating a
diversity workshop that day, but her presence had a profound impact on her and
disrupted the beliefs she held about black people. Lenora also adds, “She
and I talked and cried together for a long time that day. As I processed the
full experience while flying home the next day, I realized that diversity was
more than numbers and inclusion was more than just the words we use.”
Lenora realized it was about showing up
authentically and creating a space for others to do the same. She realized she
had to find a way to do this work in her own unique way.
Turning Barriers into Bridges
Because DEI is such a sensitive topic to
many, Lenora knew that not all clients would be in alignment with what could or
should be done within their organizations. Unlike non-threatening topics such
as customer service, time management, or how to use technology, for some
people, DEI threatens their beliefs. Lenora’s challenge was and still is, to
find ways to deliver the message in a way that people could hear it. She
says, “Some would assume that because I am black and female, my
“agenda” is to make white people feel guilty and make black people and other
under-represented groups “the victims.” Lenora realized she had to
figure out how to transform obstacles into bridges. She finds her biggest
triumphs to be when she can use stories that link to their own life
experiences. Lenora may then use that bridge to offer instances of how
different beliefs and biases affect work by presenting examples of how we, as
people with diverse life experiences, view everyday things differently.
UbuntuGlobal
Ubuntu is a Zulu proverb that means “I am
because we are.” We are because I am. This proverb reflects the cornerstone of
our thinking towards concepts, tactics, and actions related to diversity,
equity, and inclusion. UbuntuGlobal is a full-service worldwide diversity,
equity, and inclusion consulting and learning and development agency, with a
major focus on assisting organizations in effectively leveraging diversity,
equality, and inclusion in a global workplace and marketplace. Its expertise is
focused on addressing the impact of DEI on organizational performance by
assisting customers in creating and maintaining an environment that attracts
and keeps top people, appreciates inclusive leadership, and improves business
participation in the community.
Since its inception in 1986, UbuntuGlobal
has provided diversity-related leadership development and guided the
implementation of organizational-wide strategies to help clients develop an
inclusive and fair work environment. Lenora Billings-Harris created the firm
after leaving the corporate and academic worlds, where she held senior roles at
two Fortune 100 firms and a major university’s business school. UbuntuGlobal
consultants may be found in the United States, South Africa, Singapore, Sweden,
Australia, and the United Kingdom.
Even while it does not avoid difficult
subjects, the team works hard to establish a secure, non-judgmental environment
that makes addressing delicate themes a rewarding experience for everybody.
Lenora states, “Most importantly, our clients leave with knowledge to
activate inclusive actions, and a deeper understanding of the concepts for
business and personal outcomes.” All programs, processes, and
resources reflect Lenora’s belief that we are all more effective, productive,
and innovative when we honor and value our own uniqueness while at the same
time valuing and respecting the differences of others.
Words for Next Generation of D&I
Leaders
There is a wealth of data to back up the
idea that diverse and inclusive firms are more inventive and successful than
their less diverse competitors. According to Lenora, the difficulty for the
next generation of DEI leaders is determining how to effectively help their
leaders on the road to developing such a workplace. Members of the public and
internal team members want organizations to be open about their support for DEI
and the steps they are taking to eliminate disparities. As she assists DEI
practitioners in utilizing the research and understanding that all individuals
have bias and that it is natural, her aim is that they will be able to direct
their organizations on a successful DEI path with personal and organizational
gains.
Keeping Balance
“We know there is always so much to
learn in the DEI space, so we teach each other, share experiences, and
recommend books, podcasts, and other resources to deepen our knowledge.
Personally, vacations are a requirement each year” says
Lenora. She regularly schedules what her best friend calls “my day o’beauty.”
It’s a day when she has a massage, a facial, a manicure, and pedicure-a great
way to relax.
Vision for Future
Lenora’s full-time concentration is on
diversity, inclusion, and bias disruption. She works with companies to help
them utilize their variety of thoughts in order to affect employee talent
engagement and retention, consumer attraction, community relations, and
corporate relations. Her compelling yet approachable manner motivates both
virtual and in-person audience members to adopt personal and organizational
actions that disrupt bias and accelerate bottom-line business results. She
says, “We will continue to partner with leaders who want to make
long-term sustainable change and are willing to do the personal work needed as
well as the organizational work.” Her personal goal is to support
other DEI practitioners on their road to success.