In rush to embrace diversity, firms overlook the disabled

By Carmel Crimmins

June 4 (Reuters) - Caroline Ashrafi, who built a successful career as a manager at KPMG in Britain while privately struggling with mental health problems, recalls being sent on a management training course on how to retain talented women.

She found that discussions - ostensibly intended to increase diversity in the workplace - had little to do with her.

"Most people were talking about childcare, working part-time, being a woman. And I just sat there and thought none of them apply to me," she said. "What struck me then was that my biggest barrier is my depression."

Companies are working harder than ever to make their workplaces diverse. But in their efforts to reach out to women and members of ethnic minorities, many may be overlooking one of the biggest groups of under-represented talent in their midst: those living with disabilities.

The disabled are rarely covered in company reports into diversity, despite being the world's largest minority group, numbering more than 1 billion, according to the World Health Organisation.

The debate around corporate diversity tends to be framed as a way of making workplaces less "pale, male and stale". If the problem is that women and members of ethnic minorities are under-represented, then the solution is to hire, retain and promote more of them.

But some advocates say that reduces diversity to a narrow conversation about ticking gender and race boxes, rather than looking more broadly at the ways people are different.

"Sometimes when I talk to firms about working with them you often get the 'Oh, we're not doing disability, we're doing women, we're doing women and black people at the moment,'" said Helen Cooke, who advises companies on how to recruit and retain disabled graduates in Britain.

"That is the approach a lot of them will take rather than, 'let's be inclusive for everybody'."

A senior headhunter in London recalls looking for candidates for a top executive role at a major financial services firm which had been at pains to express its interest in "diversity".

His list of candidates included people of different ethnic backgrounds, sexual orientation and physical disability.

"After our shortlist review meeting, the head of HR called me and said rather sheepishly, 'What we were really wondering was...do you have any middle-aged white women?'," said the headhunter, who declined to be identified because he is not authorised to speak to the media.

THE FEAR FACTOR

The business case for having a diverse workforce and leadership is well understood. Different backgrounds and experience encourage people to think differently, helping organisations to compete. Recruiting from wider groups broadens the talent pool.