Dairy Exporter August 2020

Page 59

Governance Special report

Diversity makes for better decisions Words by: Lindy Nelson

D

iversity is a most talked about subject, yet arguably the least understood governance concept. What does it mean, why is it important and how do we get it? For the last ten years we have seen diversity as gender – get a few females around the decision-making table and the job’s done. Recently we have begun to mature our view and see it in a new light. Diversity is beyond gender: it is about ethnicity, experiences, capability, perspectives, and to work it must be about inclusion. If we can’t embrace how diversity shows up, nor understand the challenges it brings and our own reactions to that challenge, then diversity looks good from the outside but doesn’t function on the inside. At its heart diversity means “I think differently, my experiences and my perspective are different, I am probably likely to challenge your thinking.” Mostly as humans we like “similar” – “different” can feel we want to debate, deny or dismiss it. Yet in the complex,

GETTING DIVERSITY RIGHT • Create a culture where diversity will thrive • Recognise unconscious bias • Review your current board composition • Cast a wide net to find the best people • Measure what matters.

(NZ Institute of Directors)

disruptive world we find ourselves, our own perspectives and experiences are limited, and only through diverse decision making will we succeed. If I have ever felt tense at the board table it’s because diversity has just shown up and my opinions have been challenged. If I’ve made others tense it’s because I’ve been that diversity. If we can’t recognise our own bias and human responses to diversity and challenge, or if we have diversity but not inclusion or belonging, we can’t embrace the brilliance and value that diversity brings. The Institute of Directors has five suggestions for getting it right: create a culture where diversity will thrive; recognise unconscious bias; review your current board composition; cast a wide net to find the best people; and measure what matters. A board culture where diversity thrives embraces debate and dissent and uses robust decision-making processes. It makes diversity safe and normal. I can disagree; my perspectives are viewed as supporting “us” to get it right and are respected; you include me, not disclude me for my views. We seek to understand and work with bias. While we all have bias and mostly its function is to keep us safe, when we do nothing about exposing our and others’ biases we make poor decisions. A communication tool I have used to support bias is thinking about the ladder of inference – “how I got to this decision/ thinking” – then using advocacy and enquiry. Advocacy is simply “here is what I am thinking and here is why I’ve come to that conclusion”. It is about making your thinking ladder visible to others. Enquiry is similar but used in reverse

Dairy Exporter | www.nzfarmlife.co.nz | August 2020

Lindy Nelson

to unpick others thinking and knowledge – “Help me understand how you have formed that perspective and what is the knowledge you have?” Understand why you really want diversity and then get the right mix of attributes, experience, and skills you need to create it. Cast a wide net in recruiting talent. I would love to see boards build better relationships with local iwi to build both depth in the board’s decision making and support different governance experiences and opportunities for Maori. Magic happens through partnerships. Last, decide how you are going to measure diversity in your board and organisation, which will have the greatest impact. Yes, diversity takes effort, but the organisations that will succeed tomorrow will be led by boards where diversity not only belongs but is thriving. • Lindy Nelson is the founder of the Agri Women’s Development Trust, providing leadership training and development opportunities to women in the rural sector.

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Articles inside

Environment and animal welfare spur system change

2min
page 87

Maize silage, the ideal spring supplement

3min
page 89

Select Hereford bulls on merit

1min
page 88

The secret of MUNBV

2min
page 86

The lowdown on good silage

5min
pages 84-85

National dairy trainee winner ‘loves science

7min
pages 82-83

Proactive leadership proves a winner

5min
pages 80-81

Bone injuries: Broken shoulders in heifers

3min
pages 73-74

DairyNZ: Take care using antibiotics for clinical mastitis

2min
page 75

Mycoplasma bovis: Biosecurity a priority to combat disease

3min
pages 78-79

Milk replacers: To curd or not to curd?

6min
page 77

Great soil and water management wins awards

8min
pages 70-72

Doing what’s right’ for whole farm wins awards

13min
pages 62-66

CO Diary: GoDairy - Helping Kiwis get into dairying

3min
pages 45-46

Co-operative vs corporate governance

3min
pages 60-61

Diversity makes for better decisions

3min
page 59

Good governance structure benefits farm business

8min
pages 47-49

Spreading experience

7min
pages 57-58

Learning to govern effectively

1min
pages 50-51

Cashing-in on the culls

6min
pages 42-44

Shining through the drought

9min
pages 39-41

Covid-19 brought a range of challenges for Bridie Virbickas

3min
pages 14-15

Zanda Award: Winning Coaster champions staff training

10min
pages 36-38

Redesigning workplaces to make them attractive to new workers

2min
page 35

Using a Kanban workplace management system to run a Canterbury farm

10min
pages 28-34

Global Dairy – Brazil: Dairy farming in a land of contrasts

3min
page 21

Chloe Davidson shares the joys and challenges of relocating business and family

3min
page 12

High standards in a sensitive environment

9min
pages 24-27

Shiralee Seerden welcomes the extra business of a contract milking position

3min
page 13
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