Diversity and inclusion: benefits

All inclusive

31 March 2020

Traditionally slow to react to changes of culture, the built environment sector can benefit substantially from taking a lead on diversity and inclusion


Diversity and inclusion is a business imperative for attracting top talent into organisations. It is crucial that the built environment sector has a diverse and inclusive workforce that represents the global communities our profession supports and serves.

The range of roles and opportunities that the built environment offers is often misunderstood, which can make competing to attract the best and brightest talent even harder. With this war for talent cited as the number one concern by employers in the RICS report Our changing world: let’s be ready, and reiterated in the Future of the profession: consultation response report published last year, we need to consider how best to ensure diversity and inclusion at all levels and throughout people’s careers.

Our sector is acknowledged to be worryingly behind when it comes to attracting and retaining talent, particularly when it comes to gender pay gap reporting. Insight from PricewaterhouseCoopers on gender pay gap reporting highlights the extent of the problem: ‘the real-estate sector has one of the highest disparities between the proportion of women in the higher-paid quartiles and the rest of the workforce’.

Real Estate Balance, an association focused on addressing the gender imbalance in the sector, has shown that in the past 2 years considerable progress has been made in flexible working and talent development planning, with around 70% of companies now reported to have a diversity policy. Nevertheless, as the PwC report notes, ‘many employees [are] feeling impatient about the pace of change, especially on areas such as culture and behaviours’.

It is essential that building corporate diversity goes further than seeking gender parity among employees, and that companies embody inclusive practices that embrace all the nine protected characteristics of the UK’s Equality Act 2010, which are gender reassignment, sex, sexual orientation, age, disability, race, religion or belief, marriage and partnership, and pregnancy and maternity.

New professionals will want to work for an organisation that shares their values and where there are role models who reflect their career ambitions. Having a positive culture, authentic leaders, flexible working arrangements and supportive middle managers is integral to developing people, serving clients, and playing a leadership role in communities. However, it takes far more than good people management. To realise the benefits of diversity and inclusion in the organisation, it is vital that strategy is set from the top, as follows.

  • Set the vision: start with a clear and aspirational vision about how diversity and inclusion is linked to the corporate purpose, showing how these will be embraced and how they reflect the values and culture of the organisation, as well as the practical limitations.
  • Establish the baseline: identify what the organisation is currently doing, getting an honest and independent understanding from employees and clients as well as from the business metrics.
  • Write the strategy: once the aspiration has been set, the strategy itself will emerge as the organisation becomes increasingly receptive to diverse behaviours and ways of thinking. It is important to articulate the added value of a diversity and inclusion strategy to stakeholders, and allocate adequate resources and budget to support its implementation.
  • Set the cultural tone: the organisation’s leaders need to commit to the strategy. They need to avoid leaving it open to misinterpretation as well, because inconsistent messaging or behaviours will be quickly seen by employees as paying only lip service to the strategy; authenticity is key.
  • Engage stakeholders and change ambassadors: work to identify key stakeholders and ambassadors inside as well as outside the organisation who can give honest counsel and support.

Review governance and measuring progress: setting priorities with clear roles and timelines will ensure that the business monitors progress during the transition. Taking time to celebrate achievements will give greater visibility to success.

The role of CEO as leader means they should understand the capacity for improvement and set the vision for diversity and inclusion. But bear in mind that diversity and inclusion are the responsibility of everyone, and that it is not only the CEO who plays a role in changing the culture of the organisation.

People are at the heart of organisational performance. Creating a positive corporate culture, environment and workplace that enables everyone to excel makes sound business sense and will engender a far greater loyalty and work ethic. Stronger diversity and inclusion have been linked to improved financial performance, while more diverse organisations outperform less diverse rivals, with average profitability up 27% and customer satisfaction up 39%.

There is increasing evidence that companies with women on their boards outperform those without by 25%. They also see higher-than-average returns on all key measures, such as 42% greater return on sales, 53% better return on equity and 66% higher return on invested capital.

Meanwhile, those with increased racial diversity at board level bring in 15 times more sales revenue on average than those with the lowest levels of racial diversity. Board diversity sees returns on equity that are 53% higher, on average, for those in the top quartile against those in the bottom quartile, with profit margins being 14% higher in those companies that are the most diverse. Companies in the top quartile for racial and ethnic diversity are also 35% more likely to have financial returns above their respective national industry medians. The Chartered Management Institute in London has estimated that by 2025, improving diversity and inclusion could add as much as $12tr annually to the global economy.

Worth considering in all of this is that, of the more than 134,000 RICS members worldwide, women represent only 15%, and the proportion drops to around 1% for professionals who are LGBTQ, BAME or people with disabilities. Organisations are missing out on talent, and this is talent that is in demand. Diversity of thought is predicated on a diversity of people.

RICS has therefore developed 4 guiding principles for organisational leaders based on its Inclusive Employer Quality Mark. They are:

  • leadership: demonstrable commitment at the highest level to increasing the diversity of the workforce;
  • recruitment: engaging and attracting new people from under-represented groups to the professions, and employing best practice recruitment methods;
  • culture: creating an inclusive culture where all staff engage with developing, implementing, monitoring and assessing diversity and inclusion;
  • development: policies for training and promotion that offer equal access to all members of the workforce when it comes to career progression.

The need to attract, develop and retain talent is essential for business survival. Nowhere is this more acute than in the built environment sector, where organisations have been slow to react and move with the working demographic. Culture, traditions and history can determine how flexible the profession is in remoulding long-established practices in different geographies governed by local laws and religions, although the increasing number of diversity and inclusion networks and initiatives in Europe, Asia and the USA shows that the shift is already happening.

Our book, Managing Diversity and Inclusion in Real Estate, takes an holistic approach to the challenge of implementing diversity and inclusion in global business cultures. Legislation such as the General Data Protection Regulation, organisational size, education, language and geographies all influence the maturity and pace of a diverse and inclusive culture. As authors and advocates, we personally call on all CEOs and leaders in the boardroom – and everyone in the organisation and beyond – to own the agenda. Now is the time for us to shape the future of our sector.

The reception of the book has been wonderful. It is now a core text for the CBRE leadership team in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, and its senior leadership programme for future leaders across the business, while executive directors in the UK and Ireland business have each received a copy. We hope it helps to foster an environment that will encourage others to enjoy fulfilling careers that enable them to be themselves and realise their potential.

Amanda Clack is executive director at CBRE and head of strategic advisory, and a former RICS pInclusive environmentsresident. Judith Gabler is RICS director of operations – Europe

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