The Future of Work Rides on Accessibility (DEI Follows)

In a climate where organizations strive to make diversity, equity and inclusion happen, the basics of “accessibility” often get overlooked. What would it look like to consider neurodiversity in work culture and structures to attract the best talent from anywhere in the world?

 
Rada Yovovich, Coach & Facilitator

Rada Yovovich, Coach & Facilitator

In episode 27, we sit down with Rada Yovovich who makes the case for banning the “D” word (diversity) and instead, pushing play first on “accessibility.” Rada Yovovich co-founded a next-gen consultancy, The Darkest Horse, focused on helping teams build integrated future-of-work talent management strategies, politics and cultural practices that support a culture of diversity, equity, accessibility, and radical inclusion. She’s an experienced coach, meta-coach, mediator, trainer and facilitator based in Chicago.

Contrary to how DEI tends to trend in organizations, Rada laser focuses on the power of accessibility as the primary starting point. Diversity is merely a consequence if all the other pillars are operationalized first. In a moment when organizations are able to hire the best talent from anywhere in the world, accessibility comes down to the basics -- can talent show up to work, and feel supported in their neurodiversity by the structures and culture of their work spaces? While hiring for a diverse workforce is the right thing to do (and by default, translating to more justice for more kinds of people), Rada moves us to ask, “is it justice if diverse employees and workers are not being treated equitably?”

In looking ahead, what we need is to actually move towards justice and liberation, which if considered as an add-on to DEIA, can more precisely target the points of privilege and oppression we exist in. From there, we can begin to delve into questions around who holds power within an organization, and how to implement capacities for growth (such as antiracism) within the systems that hold sway to create real change internally.

What does it look like to have a big vision of the future and at the same time, hold a deep unconditional appreciation for what is true right now?
— Rada Yovovich, Coach & Facilitator

We dig into thought leadership across a wide-ranging spectrum, including:

  • The origins of “the darkest horse” archetype and how they’ll lead the future of work

  • Discerning between the D-E-I-A-J as leaders reimagine work culture, develop greater fluency in change management and open up paths for antiracism 

  • The case for making accessibility the starting point, which has the potential to open up greater capacities for growth and change 

  • Intrapreneurship vs. entrepreneurship and how to embrace the former as a skillset and state of being for innovation within an existing system 

  • As a call to action for the modern day changemaker, how can you create a big vision for the future and simultaneously hold a deep unconditional appreciation for what is true right now?


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Tiffany Wen

Tiffany Wen is a storyteller, brand strategist, content writer, co-founder of Resonance, yoga teacher and full-time epigenetic activist rewriting her own experience living with an alt-BRCA1 gene. As an anthropologist of the why, her mission is to help humans and businesses unlock their genius and consciously change the conversation about our future paradigms. In 2016, she left her corporate life in New York after a 5-year run as producer of digital, experiential and content marketing campaigns for brands like Wired Magazine, Capital One, White House, UN, and American Express. She earned her B.S. in Communication from the University of Southern California.

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Purpose in Business is at a Crossroads

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Dispelling the Model Minority Myth for Asian Liberation