Caesars
Entertainment is
proud to be the official sponsor of the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
(DEI) topic at Sustainable Brands 2019 Detroit next week. As part of our
commitment to exploring the intersections of DEI and sustainable practices via
our PEOPLE PLANET
PLAY
Corporate Social Responsibility Framework, three of our leaders will participate
in the following conference workshops and breakout sessions:
-
Lora Picini — VP of Strategic Initiatives, Gender Equity & Philanthropy
— will be a panelist in the “State of Gender Equality and Inclusion Inside
Companies” workshop on Monday, June 3rd, at 10:30am.
-
Wendy Bagnasco, Sustainability & Responsible Business Manager, will
participate in the “Cultivating the Business Leadership Required for a More
Sustainable, Inclusive, and Equitable Economy” panel on Thursday, June 6th,
at 11am.
-
DEI Strategy Director Courtney Moore will participate in the “Leadership
in Supplier Diversity and Inclusion” discussion on Thursday, June 6th, at
1:30pm.
Keep reading to find out more about how Picini, Bagnasco, Moore; and Gwen
Migita — our Global Head of
Social Impact, Equity & Sustainability — reflect and offer insights on the
intersections between DEI with Gender Inclusion, Business Leadership &
Innovation, Supplier Diversity & Inclusion, and Corporate Social Responsibility.
First and foremost, we want to frame what sustainability and DEI looks like here
at Caesars. According to Picini, “From the gender equity perspective,
sustainability means providing women with the right tools so they can serve as
leaders in their workplace and in their communities from now into the far
future.
“By doing so, by putting women into positions where they can impact policies and
make change, they will also be open to actions that will improve both
environmental and social sustainability,” she says. “We will all benefit from
that.
“DEI is about acknowledging that everyone has something different to bring to
the table, whether they come from different ethnic or racial backgrounds, have
differing abilities or different cognitive perspectives,” she adds. “We believe
that by including everyone and making the world more equitable for all, we all
benefit. We all receive the gifts of greater creativity and innovation, and the
friction of differing perspectives meeting each other.”
Once we ground our understanding of how sustainability and DEI can intersect in
our organizations, another essential element is to understand how integration
can help make us stronger organizations that contribute to a better future for
our planet.
Caesars prioritizes these synergies because, as Moore states, “Integrating DEI
and sustainability is important. The challenges facing future generations are of
such significance that they will impact people of all backgrounds. Therefore,
the path to identifying and implementing solutions to those challenges and
ensuring the quality of life for future generations should be comprehensive and
include a panoply of individuals from all backgrounds, communities and
geographies. The greater and more diverse the pool of individuals working to
reverse the negative trends related to sustainability challenges, the greater
the likelihood for a more wholistic and impactful resolution.”
While defining sustainability/DEI and integrating these two crucial business
priorities are important starting points, progressive sustainability champions
must also determine how to measure the effectiveness of their efforts. How do we
know if we’re doing a good job?
Moore suggests using actionable, incremental frameworks like the TEN Cycle
(transparency, engagement, networking) developed by Adam Werbach, the first
CEO of Saatchi & Saatchi S. According to Moore, The TEN Cycle is “a proven
model to identify sustainability performance. Firms successfully fusing DEI and
sustainability use transparency to share their challenges outward.”
Moore also advocates clarifying those challenges at the onset and emphasizing
engagement as crucial components of a successful integration strategy. She
advises champions to “Engage your employees so that they are right at the center
of your sustainability initiative. You should be able to cut open a business and
make sure everyone knows what sustainability is, how it affects them, and how it
affects the core business challenges. Next, you need to develop a network. Find
experts who are not in your business. Leverage nonprofit organizations/NGOs to
help you run a better business. Participation in their surveys, benchmarking
indices and ranking exercises provide the appropriate level of objective
feedback to assess your organization’s performance. Lastly, we can measure at
the bottom line: Both DEI and sustainability efforts have been proven to drive
revenues and decrease costs.”
A core component of Caesars’ Sustainability and DEI approach is envisioning
success. We ask ourselves what our organization will look like in five years if
we’re on the right path. Bagnasco predicts that “We will have a more strategic
community involvement strategy, more equality at different levels of the
company, and programs in place that make everyone feel safe and welcome. This
will be reflected in employee engagement surveys and increased retention.”
Identifying and measuring tangible progress is essential to ensuring ongoing
support for your sustainability & DEI integration initiatives among different
stakeholder groups. Picini connects the dots between generating internal support
and external social impact: “We will have the greatest minds — of all genders,
backgrounds and cognitive perspectives — working together to solve our world
issues around sustainability (both environmental and social). We will have
engaged employees who want to come to work and want to be involved in any
Corporate Social Responsibility-related projects and volunteer opportunities we
present, and we will all make a difference in our local communities because of
it.”
While all of this great advice from Caesars’ leaders emphasizes why
sustainability and DEI integration is so important, we also want to offer
practical guidance on how to effectively kickstart your efforts. Migita offers a
multi-faceted approach: “It goes back to the three pillars of a best practice
strategy: Authentic investments, Organizational Commitment and Alignment, and
Stakeholder Communication and Engagement. Create 1- to 5-year plans and grow
incrementally, prioritizing with time/talent and monetary resources. Benchmark
competitors relative to your company and track that year-to-year. Learn from the
mistakes and wins of others, regularly communicate and engage internal
stakeholders at many levels, and report progress (low-hanging fruit that shows
traction on activities while working on long-term heavier lifts).”
A final important point involves the need for intentional cross-collaboration
and ongoing communication. As an experienced thought leader in the fields of
Sustainability and DEI, Migita observes that “The two disciplines are far too
pillared and segmented. We often meet executives from the same organizations,
and many are unaware of ‘what the other department does’ at an integrative
level. There are so many strategic synergies that are possible. We must
integrate to advance what sustainability officers have long desired.”
Leaders at Caesars Entertainment are dedicated to exploring and furthering the
intersectional work of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion and Environmental/Social
Sustainability. We welcome you to attend the breakout sessions and workshops
noted above to see Picini, Bagnasco and Moore in action and to learn more about
what we’re doing to effectively impact social issues and make inroads on social
impact strategy.
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Caesars Entertainment
Published May 31, 2019 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST