Matrix > Toolkit: Organisational Culture and Capability > Getting Leadership on Board

Getting Leadership on Board

While every senior leadership team will be unique, GEM has encountered some narratives that have been able to trigger lightbulb moments around concrete Māori and Pasifika recruitment and progression commitments. This section looks at both senior leadership and operational leadership because experience shows that top-level support is necessary but not sufficient for improving Māori and Pasifika recruitment and progression. DEI initiatives stand or fall on operational implementation, especially understanding, resourcing and support from the operational leadership tier.

Contents

  1. GEM Snapshot: Getting senior and operational leadership on board >

  2. Partner with culturally competent training providers and facilitators to support mindset and practice shifts among operational managers >

GEM Snapshot: Getting senior and operational leadership on board

The ask when working with senior leaders

Leveraging strategic commitments already made by key senior leaders, to move towards more concrete commitments, e.g. targets and resourcing. The key is to create ownership of the outcomes.

The ask when working with operational managers

First: Getting them on board with the ‘why’, Then: Nailing down the “nitty gritty” and detail required in operational teams. Key is to create ownership of the outcomes.

The ask of all managers

Assessing cultural competence across the organisation to plan education and training takes time, sensitivity, ‘courageous conversations’ and resourcing.

  • Identify organisational gaps in knowledge, including at senior level, in order to have targeted training where it is needed. The size of the divide around understanding Te Tiriti o Waitangi, Te Reo Maōri, and other cultural considerations can be a “generational thing” where “the gap is huge” one manager observed, especially as some leadership tiers may be older than the average person in the workforce.

  • Sourcing support: There is a need for tikanga and cultural advisors, who in specialised industries are in demand and seen as “unicorns”. However, this is needed to avoid unfair burdens on Māori or Pasifika staff that can become a kind of cultural tax.

Partner with culturally competent training providers and facilitators to support mindset and practice shifts among operational managers