Everything you wanted to know about parking but were too shy to ask . . . . . .

       



 
About Parking :
 
» HOME
» Domain Parking
» Auto And Trucks

» Business And Finance

» Computers And Internet

» Education

» Family

» Food And Drink

» Gadgets And Gizmos

» Health

» Hobbies

» Home Improvement

» Humor

» Kids And Teens

» Legal

» Marketing

» Men

» Music And Movies

» Online Business

» Parenting

» Pets And Animals

» Politics And Government

» Recreation And Sports

» Relationships

» Religion

» Self Improvement

» Site Promotion

» Travel And Leisure

» Web Design

» Women

» Writing

»
»
» Random Quotes
» Best Websites
 
Great Websites :
 

Aesop’s Fables

Fun & Games

Advertise Here

Amusement

Best Baby Names

Christmas Jokes

College Humor

Complete Nonsense

Fairy Tales

Famous Poems

Famous Quotes

Flowers

Framed Posters

Free Diet Plans

Free Song Lyrics

Free View Webcams

Friendship Quotes

Funny Cat Pictures

Funny Cats

Funny Jokes

Funny Jokes Online

Funny Pictures

Funny Poems

Funny Quotes

Ghosts

Ghost Pictures

Ghost Stories

Glaswegian

Healthy Recipes

Humorous Scripts

Humor Posters

Inspirational Poems

Insult Generator

Jokes

Knock Knock Jokes

Lighthouses

Limerick Poems

Limericks

Love Poems

Fantasy Books

Mockery

Model Posters

Movie Posters

Names Meanings

Rabbie Burns

Not Mensa

Parking

Photographs

Poet

Poker Articles

Posters

Quotations Online

Random Words

Riddles

Riddles Online

Odd Jokes

Spam

Sports Posters

Duck Webcam

Strange Laws

Stupid Laws

Tongue Twisters

Top 100 Baby Names

Trophies

Vodka

Webmaster Articles

Weird Animals

Weird Facts

Weird Websites

Weird

Whisky

Wine

Work From Home

Worst City

Worst Jokes

Worst Killers

 
 
 
 
 
Parking.gs
 

Facts and Articles on Parking and Other Interesting Topics

TOPIC: Business And Finance

TITLE: Diversity Training

Article:

Diversity Training: The Worst Possible Reasons To Request Executive Funding by: Tim Dawes

You're on your organization's diversity committee. You have the best of intentions.

And that's the problem.

It leads you to appeal for funding for all the wrong reasons.

Take healthcare for example.

The US foreign-born population comprises a larger segment than at any time in the past five decades. And this trend is expected to continue(1). People of diverse racial, ethnic, and cultural heritage suffer disproportionately from cardiovascular disease, diabetes, HIV/AIDS and every form of cancer. In addition, their infant mortality rates are generally higher(2). Minorities receive measurably poorer care and they suffer for it.

Great reasons for diversity training. Disastrous reasons to ask for executive funding for your diversity program.

If you doubt me, just look at your budget. Chances are you're getting sincere encouragement from the boardroom but not budget codes that represent significant financial resources.

Here's the nut of the problem.

If you're at or near the front lines--the medical floor if you're in healthcare, or sales or service if you're in a corporation--the discussions you're having about diversity training are not the discussions your executives are having.

In healthcare, for example, when physicians, nurses, and their department heads discuss diversity training, they talk about the increased needs they experience in serving minority populations.

That conversation centers on health disparities among ethnic and cultural minorities, how they might be overcome, the new treatments that are called for, and new techniques and perspectives staff need to be educated in.

That discussion is all good. All well-intentioned. And every part it increases the expense side of the income statement.

Your executives are having a discussion of their own.

What they want to know is how diversity training impacts the business of whatever business you're in. In healthcare, that means increasing your appeal to minority patients, competing for private purchaser business, responding to public purchaser demands, and improving cost effectiveness.

In other words, while frontline staff are talking about diversity training in a way that increases costs, executives are looking for strategies to decrease costs and increase income. As long as the frontline and boardroom talk past each other, programs like diversity training will fail to receive the recognition and funding they deserve.

But you don't need to wait for a more enlightened day. In fact, you can turn a few switches on yourself.

If you're a real advocate of diversity training, I recommend you start assembling a 'business impact model', the sharp dark line that connects performance on the front line with your organization's ultimate business goals. There are some very good books where you can learn about this quickly. 'The Success Case Method' by Robert Brinkerhoff and 'Performance Consulting' by Robinson and Robinson are good places to start.

Here's the short course.

Instead of asking for money for diversity training, start from the top down. Look at your unit's business needs. In healthcare, this shows up as patient satisfaction scores, days in treatment, staffing levels, number of adverse events and law suits, and such.

Next, recognize that when your organization fails to work effectively with minority consumers, it's not only the consumers who suffer. You need to point out how your organization is missing its numbers, how improved performance on the frontline will help your unit meet it's goals, and how diversity training will create the improved performance you need.

Let me give you an example. Here's how diversity training translates to lower liability costs in hospitals.

Hospitals administrators have a significant incentive to reduce medical malpractice claims. If you do a little digging, you'll find out that four of five patients who sue haven't suffered medical negligence(3). Patients sue because they feel devalued, deserted, misunderstood, and misinformed(4).

Combine that with the knowledge that minority patients are less satisfied--in fact African Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans are 10-15 times more likely than whites to believe they would receive better health care if they were a different race(5)--and you have a recipe for trouble.

It will cost your hospital $'25

<-- Previous     |     Next -->

 

If you found "Diversity Training" interesting then check out our other :

Parking Facts and Other Articles

 
Parking.gs
 
 
 
Interesting :
 

 
 
   
 
© Website Design Copyright 2009 by Parking.gs