Articles | Ethics & Compliance | LRN

Cultural Identity & Compliance Training: Reaching Your Employees - Interactive Services

Written by E&C Expert | Jan 3, 2017 5:00:00 AM

Cultural identity is a key aspect within the workplace, and having a wide variety of identities represented matters to companies. Hiring a diverse workforce enriches the workplace experience for all staff, and allows for a wide variety of perspectives and viewpoints in the workplace.

However, diverse workplaces also create challenges when it comes to creating compliance training that appeals to a variety of diverse cultures and races. When developing and implementing a compliance training, it’s important to create a training that will appeal to and reach every employee present. Keep these ideas in mind for creating a learning space that’s safe for employees from all backgrounds:

  • Use examples that relate to employees from various backgrounds. A good compliance training ensures everyone feels included in the presentation. When relating examples and giving employees written case studies, use employee names that come from a wide variety of nationalities and cultural backgrounds, as well as making sure men and women get represented equally. When using multimedia, choose visual media that incorporates employees from different races and cultures.

 

  • Make an effort to call on employees equally. All of us have good intentions when it comes to treating employees equally, but research shows that unconscious internalized bias comes into play for educators of all backgrounds. Several studies have demonstrated that teachers are more likely to call on white, male students than women or minority students. Make a conscious, deliberate effort to equally involve employees who represent different backgrounds.

 

  • Be aware of, and open to learning about, cultural differences. Cultures often have very different approaches to privacy, which can change how they view compliance. For example, employees from India often live in closer quarters in India, and need less privacy or personal space than American employees. Be open to learning from employees about their cultural traditions, and adapting the compliance material that’s sensitive diverse backgrounds.

Contact us for help developing racially and culturally sensitive workplace compliance training.