Title: Leading diversity
1Leading diversity
2The plan for the next 60 minutes
- Diversity definition and benefits
- Diversity at Westpac
- How we Execute
- Our Focus
- Case Studies
3Who likes jelly beans?
- Choose a jelly bean dont eat it (yet)!
- Think about the colour when you choose it
4Sowhat does your jelly bean say about you?
- WHITE OR BLACK
- Highly structured and organized
- Surrounds are neat
- If given an assignment, wants to know how many
pages, exact requirements - Always wants to know the rules
- Memorises things well
- Cant stand sloppy, unorganised people
- Deliberates before making decisions
- YELLOW
- Not usually outspoken
- Always in a state of transition
- Usually smart and innovative, often artistic
- Sometimes confused in making decisions, unsure
where theyre supposed to be - Hard workers
- Exciting to be with will try anything
- Spiritual aspects usually important to them
- Look at things with perspective respect others
opinions
- RED AND PINK
- Courageous and their energy seems boundless
- Smile lots ask others why theyre not smiling
- Genuinely care become involved in others
problems - Make decisions with feelings, act on impulses
- On the phone lots, usually listening to others
- Sensitive, enthusiastic friends
- PURPLE
- Flirty and passionate
- Highly creative and highly excitable
- Short attention spans cant stay put for long
at a time - Disorganised, often choosing to close doors
rather than deal with the mess - Procrastinators who thrive on chaos, enjoy the
challenges of different problems - Have a problem dealing with highly structured
time - Questioning when given an assignment, asks why
it must be done a certain way, want to do it
differently - Set high standards for themselves and others
- GREEN AND BLUE
5What is diversity?
Dimensions of Difference
- What does it mean at work?
- People can expect to work in an inclusive culture
where they are valued for the individual
qualities and perspectives they bring to the job,
leading to a more innovative and productive
business environment. - What does it mean for leaders?
- Diversity capable leaders draw on the differences
within their team to capitalise on diversity in
style and approach and help each individual
achieve their potential. They spend time coaching
their people on how to embrace difference and why
it is important
6Diversity is good for business
Capturing the economic, social and cultural
dividends from valuing diversity in employees,
customers and suppliers can offer a sustainable
competitive advantage
Offers greater employee engagement leading to
improved productivity and profitability
Better understanding of the needs of current and
potential customers
Delivers sustainable value for shareholders
Enhances reputation in the community as a trusted
organisation that does the right thing
7Diversity at Westpac
What we want to be
To be one of the worlds great companies for
diversity and flexibility
To have a workforce profile that delivers
competitive advantage
To leverage the value of diversity for all our
stakeholders
To be a truly inclusive, barrier free workplace
To role model and be recognised as an innovator
in diversity practice
What this means
Women in Leadership
Indigenous Employment
Age Balance
Accessibility
Where we focus
Cultural Mix
How we do it
8How we Execute
Board Nominations Committee Ted Evans (Chair)
Group Diversity Council Gail Kelly (Chair)
Diversity Flexibility Team
Business Divisions
Employee Action Groups
HR CoEs
Corporate Affairs Sustainability
9Our Diagnostic Process
- Annual Staff Perspective Survey - over 90
response rate measures engagement, culture and
leadership - Annual Diversity Survey 50 response rate for
inaugural survey focused on all areas of
diversity - Focus Groups with employees from all areas of
the Group to take a deeper dive into survey
results - Employee Action Groups designed to provide
networking opportunities and business input - Ad hoc employee feedback - employees provide
feedback on our People Policies by contacting our
HR Help Desk - Exit interview data and case management data
analysis - we regularly analyse what employees
leaving the organisation tell us about their
experience at The Westpac Group.
10Flexibility in the Workplace
FROM
TO
- 43 of people (36 of men and 48 of women)
engage in flexible working - The most used forms of flexibility are
- 17 work part-time
- 14 work from home occasionally (used twice as
much by males than females) - 4 of respondents work from home regularly
- 12 have flexible start and finish times
- While work/home balance is a desired value for
both men and women, it is not currently achieved
by many - 58 of employees have personal or life-stage
needs that require flexibility in the next 1.5-3
years
- Redefine flexibility to include well being and
workability - Help employees identify whats important to them
and remove any barriers to workforce
participation - Have role models and celebrate flexibility in
senior roles to improve the perception of
flexibility - Mainstream flexibility and improve leader
capability to support flexibility
11Our Approach
High impact in the short term but likely
unsustainable
Low visible impact in the short term but
creates sustainable culture change
12Superannuation on Unpaid Parental Leave
- Australia's first major corporation to pay
superannuation on unpaid parental leave - Pay up to 39 weeks of superannuation - on top of
the super contributions we pay during paid
parental leave (13 weeks) - Industry-leading initiative that helps reverse
retirement savings gap experienced by employees - The average woman today on retirement has just
45,000 in her super account, compared with the
average male who has 130,000 - Women who take career breaks to have children
have approximately 26 less in their super than
women who don't - Will be worth an additional 72,000 at retirement
to employee earning 55,000pa who has two periods
of parental leave from age 28
13Women In Leadership
FROM
TO
- 63 of our workforce is female
- Strong employment brand for women and reputation
for flexibility - Market leading policies but some inconsistency
in application - Strong gender mix in junior and middle
management, weaker at senior management level
but making progress - Unique Womens Markets Business positioning
- A Clear target of winning more than our share of
the best women graduates each year - Workforce better reflects the diversity of our
customers - Every individual has the opportunity to reach
their full potential - 40 of our senior leaders are women in 2014
- innovative policies
- clear objectives for gender diversity
- continuing succession planning, mentoring,
networking and career development - refreshing our leadership programs for women
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23Questions?
24Additional Slides
25Women in Leadership other initiatives
- Introducing gender targets into our graduate
recruitment program - Reviewing succession plans for gender balance to
ensure enough women are being represented - Enforce guided distribution by gender and work
pattern for performance and pay review - Working with our recruitment providers to ensure
we see more quality female candidates presented
on short lists - Ensuring for internal recruitment there are
quality female candidates on short lists and
females involved in interview and selection
panels - Further reviewing our promotion and selection
processes for equality of opportunity - External market mapping and relationship building
with key female talent outside our organisation - Extending/converting mentoring into sponsorship
where executives take ownership of career
progression of key talent - Reverse mentoring where women share their
experiences and challenges with senior leaders - Including diversity and inclusion as a critical
leadership competency