Microaggressions Fuel Turnover
One key setting where it’s vital to adopt asset-based language is the workplace. Labor market research suggests that the language people use at work can have an impact on their colleagues’ feelings of loyalty to their employers and on their sense of belonging.
In a recent Indeed survey of 615 Black workers at U.S. organizations, 49% of respondents said they’re either actively looking for a new job or are considering leaving their employers. Of those, 43% said they’re doing so because they’d experienced microaggressions on the job. Given that Gallup reports the cost of replacing an employee can range from one-half to two times the employee’s salary, using asset-based language in the workplace could pay off for employers by reducing microaggressions and the turnover that stems from a hostile work environment.
Research by McKinsey and Company found that business leaders who want to advance racial equity in the workplace face a systems-level challenge and must assess all aspects of their operations to identify and address problems ranging from structural inequities to individual behaviors. One way to promote and cultivate individual behaviors that can improve support for Black workers throughout the enterprise is to help all employees understand how using asset-based language can create a more inclusive culture.
A Guide to Language That Drives Positive Change
JFF’s Center for Racial Economic Equity has developed a resource that can help leaders promote inclusion in their language at work and beyond: The Language of Racial Economic Equity: An Asset-Based Guide to Advance Black Learners and Workers. Informed by Black-identifying leaders across JFF, this guide offers practical advice and insights for organizations and individuals interested in using asset-based language or learning more about key racial equity terms and the evolution of language pertaining to race.