Why is it so hard to understand how to “Do Inclusion”?

Deborah Travers-Wolf
5 min readSep 14, 2017

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“Can’t you just give me a check list?”

If you’re like me and have been asked this question before and tried to create that checklist — you’ll realise just how challenging that endeavour is — the possibilities are endless! And need to be personalized to each individual.

Whilst Diversity is about the actions you take, Inclusion is about the mindsets and behaviours you demonstrate, each and every day, one customer, one colleague and one team member at a time. It’s about achieving the power of “Collective Intelligence”.

Why don’t you just tell me what I need to know and do?

  • Your journey will be different than mine, because of your own unique combination of mindsets, experiences and behaviours.
  • But the good news is, no matter where we are in the world — we’re all just people, too. People wanting to be valued and to belong, and feel safe enough to contribute what we really believe will make a difference.

Like trust, inclusion can be a virtuous or a vicious circle. The key to creating your own “Circle of Inclusion” is a desire to become a more inclusive partner with your customers, colleagues or team members.

  • You can create your own virtuous circle, one conversation at a time and one human being at a time, by starting in the centre of the circle, and recognising each of the key mindsets and skillsets required to create a virtuous circle of Inclusion.
  • The key is to encourage diverse participation from the very start, there is a truism, however, in the words of Theodore Roosevelt, “Nothing worth having comes easy.”
The Circle of Inclusion — the power in diversity

If you can’t tell me what to do, then how am I going to actually do it?

Whilst I can’t give you the specific answers that are exactly right for you, I can help you find those answers for yourself, by asking you some questions. It’s a key principle of our coaching practice here at SAP.

  • The following 10 questions will help you build on your own existing mindsets and behaviours, and zero in on your own unique answers. They will set you on the path to creating your own personal “Circle of Inclusion” and becoming a more inclusive trusted advisor, colleague or leader.

Question 1

What is the benefit of authentically including your customers and colleagues in conversations and decisions?

  • What’s the benefit, dividend, payback if I do this one customer and one conversation at a time?
  • What’s the price if I don’t?

Question 2

Are you ready to explore how to become more “human with your customers” or “inclusive with your colleagues and team members”?

  • What am I missing out on if I don’t?

Question 3 — where you are now?

Are you a “clumsy colleague” or an “artful advocate” for inclusion?

  • If you were to place yourself on a continuum with clumsy colleague at one end, and artful advocate at the other — where would you place yourself?

Question 4

How “Cognitively Compromised” are you right now?

  • Are you in “c-state”? (calm, clear, collected, composed, clever and considered in your thinking)? or
  • “F-state”? (fast, frantic, flustered, furious, fearful)

Have you ever tried to change a habit when you’re in “f-state”? If so, you’ll know just how difficult that can be.

Question 5

In this situation, what is your biggest bias?

  • How is it influencing your actions and behaviour towards this customer, colleague or team member?

Question 6

How did it feel the last time you were excluded from a decision or a conversation?

  • What was the impact or consequence on the decision, outcome or conversation i.e. what was not considered as a result of your absence?

Question 7

What do you value most?

  • Who may you not be fully respecting or understanding in this conversation or in your team?
  • What insight or information are you missing out on as a result? What is the impact or risk of that?

Question 8

How can you value / appreciate them more?

  • How can you make people feel safer, so they contribute even more insight and generate more creativity and new ideas?

Question 9

How can you more effectively connect and engage with them?

  • What might you need to do to adapt or flex, and understand their perspective?

Question 10

What will you do today, to take one step to becoming a more artful advocate in your next customer, colleague or team meeting?

So that’s it?

Each and every time you reinforce your Circle of Inclusion, you will learn something new (if you are open and ready to explore).

  • You can start creating your own “Circle of Inclusion” today by asking yourself some important questions. If you’re not sure of some of your answers, you can ask others on your team, their insights may provide you with some additional ideas to find the “Power in Diversity”, i.e. Inclusion.

Your success in creating your own virtuous “Circle of Inclusion” will likely depend on a variety of influences:

1. Your motivation, likely the result of the value you place on becoming more inclusive and the benefits you hope to realise and whether you have a “fixed or a growth mindset”.

2. Your skill, almost certainly dependent upon the “state” of your brain, what you say to yourself in your own mind and the behaviours you’ve learned throughout your life.

3. A powerful past exclusion experience, will probably increase your humility and your humanity, as well as your desire to provide an inclusive environment for all; customers, colleagues and team members alike.

4. Your ability to stay curious and connect with empathy — one person at a time, will help you respect and understand each individual, as an individual.

5. Your discipline in applying a new set of LENSes, will help you learn both new mindsets and new behaviours. At SAP, we recommend you:

a. Look Inside

b. Explore Perspectives

c. Nurture Inclusion

d. Share Responsibility — be a courageous champion

Diversity without inclusion, is just diversity.

Inclusion is the dividend you reap when you create diversity, and approach it with the right mindset and skillset.

You can start creating your own “Circle of Inclusion”, by changing your own conversations with others.

Stay curious, connect with empathy and delight in creating the “Music of Strangers.” It comes when you “Focus on Insight & Inclusion.” #businessbeyondbias is what we stand for at SAP.

Deborah Travers-Wolf is a Learning and Development Expert at SAP and a subject matter expert in the design of SAP’s Focus on Insight program.

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Deborah Travers-Wolf

Passionate advocate for Inclusion — make it real, make it now! Join me on the journey — making the world run better and improving people’s lives!