Thanks to
Disability:IN, disability advocates around the world have new tools and
programs to advance disability inclusion and equality in business.
Disability:IN
is a global organization driving disability inclusion and equality in business.
It has best-in-class conferences and programs, expert counsel and engagement,
public policy leadership and the world’s most comprehensive disability
inclusion benchmarking and reporting tool — Disability Equality Index.
This year
marks the 10th edition of the Disability Equality Index, a milestone marked
with the debut of scored benchmarks in seven countries outside of the United
States. The expansion comes in direct response to a growing demand for
culturally competent tools to comprehensively measure disability inclusion
efforts in multinational corporations.
Following a
two-year global pilot program in which 98 companies across 66 countries
participated, Brazil, Canada, Germany, India, Japan, the Philippines and the
United Kingdom were selected for the expanded program. The countries were
chosen based on demand demonstrated during the pilot, as well as to ensure
adequate global representation across geographic regions and at varying stages
of economic and social development.
Also
celebrating 10 years of success is Inclusion Works, the organization’s
disability inclusion consulting service. Its team of disability inclusion
experts offers unlimited, bespoke virtual and on-site consulting to help
corporations create an inclusive culture, while simultaneously developing a
sustainable recruitment strategy.
According
to Disability:IN data, companies consulting with Inclusion Works increased
their new hires of individuals with disabilities from 339 new hires
in 2015 to 383,000 new hires as of December 2023. In addition, they
improved their Disability Equality Index scores from an average of 68% in 2015
to an average of 91.3% in 2022.
We asked
Disability:IN President and CEO Jill Houghton to reflect on a decade of growth,
as well as trends for the future of disability inclusion.
Q: Inclusion Works is celebrating 10
successful years. How has this initiative evolved? What trends are you seeing
in terms of challenges companies face with disability inclusion?
A: Disability:IN’s Inclusion Works
program began with six companies committed to advancing their disability
inclusion journey and has grown to more than 135+ major brands representing
over 10 million employees and more than $5.5 trillion dollars in revenue. There
are no competitors, only collaborators in the Inclusion Works Corporate
Community of Progress and at the core of everything we are focused on engaging
with talent with lived experience so that we can collectively work together to
advance disability inclusion and accessibility.
One of the
most impactful outcomes of Inclusion Works is that the new hires of talent with
disabilities has grown from 339 new hires in 2015
to 383,000 new hires as of December 2023. Participating companies
receive an assigned disability inclusion expert with 10+ years of corporate
experience. This expert and our team provide a concierge service customized to
the company’s needs. While all companies are at different stages of their
journey our team is focused on developing and delivering innovative resources,
exclusive semi-annual meetings, facilitated connections and approaches to help
accelerate disability inclusion and accessibility.
Disability:IN
has identified five actions that companies take:
• Encourage
employee self-identification: Implement a confidential and voluntary process
for employees to self-identify as individuals with disabilities, enabling
accurate tracking and improved workforce support.
• Leverage
disability-focused ERGs: Utilize the cross-functional expertise and lived
experiences of ERGs to gain valuable insights and enhance inclusivity
strategies.
• Conduct
accessibility audits: Audit for compliance under the World Wide Web
Consortium’s Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.1 AA to guarantee that
digital content is accessible to all users.
• Modernize
corporate governance: Revise charters to include prospective directors with
disabilities in the definition of board diversity as most already do with
gender, race and ethnicity.
•
Accelerate Spending with Disability-Owned Business Enterprises®: Include
disability in supplier diversity/inclusive procurement efforts.
Q: Artificial intelligence, or AI,
continues to be a hot topic in every sector. As companies explore and/or
embrace AI, what should they keep in mind in terms of accessibility and
inclusion?
A: As companies and organizations
begin to incorporate AI into their workflows, the first step is to include
individuals with disabilities in every phase of ideation, design, development,
implementation and iteration. The second step is not to let perfection get in
the way of good. And of course, through every phase, ensure the data set is
accurate and diverse perspectives are represented.
Q: As Disability:IN celebrates the
10th anniversary of two cornerstone initiatives, what progress do you see
in the area of disability inclusion over the past decade?
A: When looking at this year’s
Disability Equality Index — which has seen nearly 10 times the growth in
participation since 2015 — we see select places where inclusion has transformed
radically over the past 10 years, in contrast to the majority of growth which
has been incremental.
This is the
area of progress we’re most excited about — around 25% growth in adoption
across participants — because we see a really comprehensive mix of practices
that improve employee experience such as:
• Growth of
employee resource groups.
• Increased
access to digital and web-based products vis-à-vis policy requirements for
digital accessibility.
• Stronger
pipelines for disabled applicants through policies like accessible
accommodations.
• Wider
availability of such accommodations because of more centralized funds to pay
for them.
• More
distributed resources throughout the business ecosystem by supporting
disability-owned business enterprises.
These
practices roughly align with the categories that we parse the benchmark into,
so we’re excited to see transformative and holistic growth across categories
that improve the workplace for employees and entrepreneurs with disabilities.
Growing
global portfolio of programming
To meet
accelerated corporate demand for a global focus on disability inclusion,
Disability:IN is building its portfolio of programming to support expected
results from the Disability Equality Index expansion. This programming
includes:
• Convening
a global roundtable and regional councils in [the Asia Pacific] APAC, [Europe,
Middle East and Africa] EMEA and [Latin America] LATAM to unite corporate
leaders around disability inclusion in their regions.
• Securing
international consultants in Brazil, France, Taiwan and the United Kingdom to
support the councils.
In November
2023, Disability:IN hosted a first-of-its-kind business disability
inclusion, convening in Japan with support from Google LLC and other
corporations.
Piloting
efforts to connect global partner companies with disabled talent in their
countries, including a virtual recruiting showcase that brought together 22
companies and more than 250 candidates from France, Germany and the United
Kingdom.
Early
international expansion has led to disability-owned business enterprise (DOBE)
certifications issued in Canada, Germany, India and the United Kingdom.
Additionally, Disability:IN will launch quarterly meetings for corporate
inclusive procurement professionals in APAC, EMEA and LATAM in 2024.
To learn
more about Disability:IN, visit disabilityin.org.