The Carroll School of Management has launched a yearlong series of forums on the topic of 鈥渋nclusive leadership,鈥 featuring a noted consultant and author who told students and others that top companies are seeking to forge bold initiatives on diversity鈥斺淎nd we鈥檙e going to need inclusive leaders to guide us.鈥

Carol Fulp, author of , made the comment during on September 21. 鈥淒on鈥檛 let anyone tell you it鈥檚 something nice to do,鈥 said Fulp, alluding to the notion that diversity is mainly a social or ethical concern. 鈥淚t鈥檚 good for business. It鈥檚 the smart thing to do.鈥

Carol Fulp

Diversity expert and author Carol Fulp

The 90-minute event kicked off the Inclusive Leadership Forum Series, which is geared primarily to students in the Carroll School鈥檚 graduate programs. In the wake of renewed struggles over systemic racism in the United States, M.B.A. students in particular voiced a desire for discussions on the subject of diversity and inclusion.

鈥淲e have listened,鈥 said Andy Boynton, the Carroll School鈥檚 John and Linda Powers Family Dean, likening this forum series to aimed at addressing racial inequities and encouraging fresh perspectives. The Carroll School series is focused especially on helping to equip students with the knowledge and skills needed for leadership in today鈥檚 increasingly multicultural environment.

鈥淎nd I鈥檓 thrilled that the forum series will be facilitated by Carol Fulp,鈥 Boynton said of the featured speaker, who is CEO of Fulp Diversity, LLC. She previously served as president and CEO of The Partnership, Inc., New England鈥檚 premier organization dedicated to bolstering the region鈥檚 competitiveness by attracting and developing multicultural professionals.

Fulp is expected to lead as many as seven more forums during this academic year, on topics such as the business imperative of diversity and how millennial values are helping to reshape corporate values, said Marilyn Eckelman, associate dean of Carroll School of Management Graduate Programs, which is coordinating the series. The second forum, scheduled for Oct. 29, will address the question of overcoming unconscious bias and how to be anti-racist in the workplace.

鈥淲e鈥檝e started a conversation on the business advantages of diversity and inclusion, and it鈥檚 the first of many conversations,鈥 said Eckelman, adding that the initiative comes in response to students who have 鈥渟hared their thoughts and stories on the topic of racial injustice and our collective responsibility to address the inequities. They鈥檝e given us great ideas about how to further educate ourselves as a community.鈥

After brief introductions by Boynton and Eckelman at the opening forum, Fulp invoked a variety of studies pointing to those business advantages. 鈥淎t the end of the day, global corporations have to reflect the myriad of markets they serve,鈥 she explained. Later on, she added, 鈥淎s business leaders we have to understand that everyone brings something different to the table. And that difference is the marketplace.鈥

Dewin Hernandez, M.B.A./M.S.W. 鈥21, facilitated questions from students, one of whom asked about how to foster diversity when the leadership of an organization is not especially interested in doing so.

鈥淢any organizations are like that,鈥 Fulp replied, making the point鈥斺淛ust because someone is a white male doesn鈥檛 mean you don鈥檛 have an ally.鈥 She suggested identifying the leaders who are most likely to listen to these concerns, and start by asking their opinions on how best to 鈥渕ove the organization鈥 on diversity issues. That鈥檚 how leaders begin to learn about diversity and take the first steps toward enacting change, 鈥渟o they could own it and be proud of it.鈥

Underscoring the urgency of such steps (even small ones at first), Fulp added, 鈥淲e are leading through changing times. We are in a particular moment that we have to seize.鈥

At the end of the forum, Boynton remarked, 鈥淲e鈥檙e all in, and we鈥檙e looking forward to the next session.鈥


Header image via The Boston Globe