I find the greatest reason to celebrate Women’s History Month, is to acknowledge that through extreme sacrifice and determination, tremendous progress has been made to improve equality and inclusion in the world —however, we must continue to courageously carry the torch into the future, fostering further improvements today and for the next generation. This work is not done, and there is great room for opening more opportunities to bring all voices to the table.
The Women’s March on Washington, a major milestone in history that occurred during our lifetime, took place five short years ago. As we celebrate Women’s History Month, I have been thinking back to that moment in time, to reflect on where we stand today. The truth is, progress can be tough to measure and is sometimes slow, particularly in areas that are tough to research and calibrate with bias and unconscious bias as a constant influence beneath the surface.
This topic is important to me as a leader, but it is also personal. As a husband and parent. As a proud husband of my wife who has had a long and meaningful career as a licensed Clinical Social Worker, and also a father of an extremely talented software engineer [underrepresented in her field] this topic is also front-and-center in my home. As we look to the next generation, I witness my two brilliant granddaughters trailblazing to achieve great success and wonder what opportunity will look like for them in the future.
With full honesty, this is not always an easy topic to openly discuss without discomfort or vastly varying opinions, because there are many facets relating to society, culture, religions, family history, and most importantly individual views that influence bias, whether unconscious or not.
Unconscious bias is a real and an important underlying issue that needs to be addressed in the world and within all organizations striving for success and inclusion. Operating under the belief that diverse teams deliver innovative and better results, we are focused on diversifying our teams across the board—however true inclusion of our diversified workforce must follow. We know that growth and innovation are fueled through diverse ideas coming from our diverse employees working together.
With this you might ask, how can I actually help? What can I do to make a difference?
I believe there are a few fundamental ways we can all work to become better adversaries and champions for equality every day:
With more than 120 years in operation, D&Z has always been at the forefront of history, with women leading the charge outside of what was declared stereotypical employment, to support the war effort in our munitions production plants —and today supporting the U.S. National Security Mission.
As we proudly celebrate the many great women who have overcome adversity, also celebrating our own women within Day & Zimmermann today, and through history, we must continue to support diversity, inclusion, and equality— this will enable us to accelerate the next generation of innovation