As a leader it’s my job to shine a light on what’s going on around me, interpret it and influence others in a positive direction.

Using my sight, I notice what’s important to benefit my team, my organization and our world.

Sometimes, just like when a light image is projected on my retina, I’m upside-down in my view. Other times, I’m blind in one particular spot like where the optical nerve connects to the retina. (What can I say, I’ve spent a lot of time with Optometrists).

It’s only through noticing my upside-downness or blindness that I can process it through my nervous and emotional system to connect with the full picture.

Throughout my career, I’ve recruited and coached diverse business teams of talented individuals. Diversity of skill, viewpoint and relationship is critical as we create services for the complex needs of human beings. I could tell you that I started building diverse teams because it offered a way for everyone’s voice to be heard, and to connect to the humanity in each person, but that wouldn’t be true.

The truth for me lacked emotional and idealistic content. I believe in diverse teams because they outperform homogeneous groups. A 2015 McKinsey report on 366 public companies found that those in the top 25% for management ethnic and racial diversity were 35% more likely to have financial returns beyond the mean for their industry.

I led these diverse teams with “can-do” attitude and optimism. And with this optimism, I strode into action. I was ready to do something about a challenge, but not really connecting to the problem.

The problem was racism, yet I didn’t see it even when I was so close.

I shrugged my shoulders, remained positive and continued to move ahead. When I noticed racism, it was mostly in video news clips including reprehensible words of those looking to incite fear.

But racism was around me, and I was shamefully ignoring it.

A friend helped me realize just how blind I had been, like the spot on my retina.

“Imagine if you were kidnapped,” she said, “brought to another country, raped, beaten and owned as property. And if that wasn’t enough, your collective history was erased and replaced by white European culture, the culture of your oppressors.”

“Essentially, my identity was suppressed by the people who were supposed to be my neighbors, and I struggled in this life to find it.” She added.

Racism is real and alive every day in this country. For many, authority figures such as business leaders and police are oppressors instead of protectors.

These are not just beliefs. There are many verifiable facts about this. Facts that, up until recently, I have filtered out in my naïve, optimistic, and disconnected efforts to build diverse teams.

Let’s bring a real reason for diverse teams into the light – because racism exists and must be overcome at every level. I get to (not have to) see my team through empathy. And I get to put that into action. I get to feel the pain and responsibility too.

There is no room to hide the bigotry I have ignored, those who only want to work with “their kind”. I am ready to have that conversation more directly now.

As leaders, it is our responsibility to see and eradicate racism and bigotry. First by education, and if that doesn’t work, we cut it out like the cancer it is. The majority I am in has a moral obligation to serve and protect the minority.

A few articles ago, I challenged leaders to exercise ownership thinking – asking “What could go wrong?” I invite you now to look through your own unconscious bias and answer these questions:

  1. What is upside down or in my blind spot?
  2. What has gone wrong for so long that I might not even notice most days?
  3. What can I do right now, tomorrow and for our future?

As leaders, it’s up to us. #BlackLivesMatter

How are you shining a light on racism, shameful acts and deeply disturbing elements of our society?

Jeff@COOForYou.com
888-588-0357