Critical Conversations that Drive Inclusive Leadership

Episode 432 | Host: Emilie Aries | Guests: Stephanie Chin and Sarah Noll Wilson

What courageous conversations are you having as an inclusive leader?

Deepen your business relationships with real talk.

The conversation around inclusive leadership is expanding. More and more leaders want to understand what it means, why it’s lacking, and how to get better at it.

In this episode, I dive into a conversation that gets a bit spicy at times, and ends up completely illuminating, with two women who are transforming the inclusive leadership sphere.

Stephanie Chin is a leadership consultant and the founder of Spicy Conversations, where she helps leaders implement behavior and systems change that makes a real difference. Sarah Noll Wilson, a friend and client of Stephanie’s, empowers leaders to honor the complexity of their employees. She’s an executive coach, researcher, and the author of Don’t Feed the Elephants.

The stigmas preventing essential conversations

Why aren’t we having important conversations at work that make all our employees feel welcome and essential? It’s easy to brush this absence off as a bunch of horrible bosses who just don’t care—and there are certainly plenty of those—but good people often avoid these discussions as well.

Even leaders who are conscious of potential missteps worry about saying the wrong thing publicly or upsetting the employees they want to support. But the problem with this avoidance is that while these people—let’s be honest, mostly white folks—are concerned with getting canceled, people who identify as BIPOC are full-on exhausted. They’re sick of navigating these often pointless back-and-forths and shouldering the burden of educating those who perpetuate harm about the realities of systemic oppression.

The benefits of doing the work

Stephanie has seen more than enough leaders seeking to learn how to authentically have these inclusive conversations. Leaders like Sarah, with whom she’d been having these spicy conversations long before they began an official working relationship.

Sarah’s business revolves around transforming relationships from good to great, and these discussions are a vital component of this shift. But even for someone already cognizant of this, it wasn’t a cakewalk to come to terms with feedback that highlighted how far she still had to go.

Discovering you aren’t as conscious of these interactions as you thought doesn’t feel great at the beginning, but repeat exposure works wonders. What started as feelings of fragility for Sarah, as an urge to insist she didn’t mean that, isn’t like that, eventually morphed into something heavy but productive. The impacts of her missteps, however unintended, came into clearer focus, but so too did the realization that everyone will make mistakes in this work; the trick is to keep learning.

Start by just stopping

Stephanie and Sarah are here to help organizations seeking to instigate positive change, but wherever you’re at in your career, you can begin exploring better ways to have challenging conversations on your own.

First of all: just listen. As an Asian-American woman, Stephanie has to arm herself before she enters pretty much any room, where she’s frequently experienced white women who discount her experience as not real.

For the women who hear that and immediately think “well, I would never do that,” it’s especially important to take a moment and mindfully reflect. Recognize these defenses and ask “When have I done this, and how might I do it differently?” Do what Sarah calls a courageous audit.

Be willing to consider the pain you might be causing. That’s not easy, but at the end of the day, inclusive leaders need to be brave, and they need to do the work.


Related Links from today’s episode:

Find Stephanie Chin on LinkedIn

Find Sarah Noll Wilson on LinkedIn

DM Sarah to find out how you can start implementing change

Stephanie’s Spicy Conversations printable cheatsheet

Don’t Feed the Elephants by Sarah Noll Wilson

Conversations on Conversations Podcast

The Culture Map by Erin Meyer

On Jim Irsay’s recent comments

Harvard Business Review on self-awareness

How To Be An Inclusive Leader with Jennifer Brown Bossed Up episode

White Fragility, White Women's Tears, And Dismantling White Supremacy with Robin DiAngelo Bossed Up episode

Armchair Expert’s Jonathan Van Ness podcast episode

My book, Bossed Up: A Grown Woman’s Guide to Getting Your Sh*t Together

Level Up: a Leadership Accelerator for Women on the Rise

Bossed Up job search resources

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

LEVEL UP YOUR LEADERSHIP TO BECOME A MORE INCLUSIVE LEADER:

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