tara robertson – diversity, equity + inclusion Skip to content tara robertson diversity, equity + inclusion Menu and widgets Pages About Presentations Publications Selected media and talks Contact Search for: This work by Tara Robertson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Follow me on Twitter My Tweets Names: respect, inclusion and belonging Diversity, equity and inclusion is not about just revising HR policies and processes to be more inclusive and equitable, it’s a lens that you need to view everything through. For product organizations it’s a key lens to look at the product and customer experience.  I’ve been thinking about personal names and how those are a point of inclusion and belonging, or not. Names are personal, and for many of us, an important part of our identity. Continue reading Names: respect, inclusion and belonging Posted on December 2, 2020December 5, 20201 Comment on Names: respect, inclusion and belonging Thought leaders in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion you should know I can’t think of any company, country, or industry that has diversity, equity and inclusion all figured out–it’s an emergent space where we’re all learning how to do better. We can always learn from the people leading the work and from the research. I am sharing this list of nine thought leaders who I admire. I admire that they center their values in their work, drive results and are generous in sharing their thoughts and ideas. It is weighted towards women of colour and queers in the tech sector. I think these people’s work experience, formal credentials and lived experience, makes what they have to say extremely valuable.  Continue reading Thought leaders in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion you should know Posted on November 10, 2020November 17, 2020Leave a comment on Thought leaders in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion you should know Diversity Equity and Inclusion workshops and courses that I’m excited about photo by Jacob Lund from Noun Project Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) is a growing business. There are numerous DEI tech startups, DEI companies, DEI consultants and DEI certifications. I’ve been underwhelmed by the certifications offered by academic institutions as they are overly theoretical and don’t seem to equip learners with practical skills to do DEI work. Here are some trainings and workshops that are coming up that I’m excited about. Continue reading Diversity Equity and Inclusion workshops and courses that I’m excited about Posted on October 21, 2020November 10, 2020Leave a comment on Diversity Equity and Inclusion workshops and courses that I’m excited about Glassdoor’s D&I ratings: What does 4.6 out of 5 even mean? stars by Darko Pevec, licensed under Creative Commons Today I learned that Glassdoor recently added diversity and inclusion metrics to their company rankings. My first reaction was excitement–this could drive accountability and increase transparency on diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI). We know that many many people care about DEI in an employer’s brand, so this seems like useful functionality for candidates researching potential companies. Glassdoor launched these user submitted D&I reviews with 12 companies. Salesforce scored the highest, with 4.6/5. That’s great! But what does it mean? Continue reading Glassdoor’s D&I ratings: What does 4.6 out of 5 even mean? Posted on October 2, 2020November 6, 2020Tags DEI, diversity and inclusion, diversity equity and inclusion, metricsLeave a comment on Glassdoor’s D&I ratings: What does 4.6 out of 5 even mean? Some diversity and inclusion best practices in hiring Image from Women of Color in Tech stock images collection After 3 years leading Diversity and Inclusion at Mozilla I’m looking for my next job: Director or Head of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion at a tech company that’s hungry to make systemic change. At Mozilla one of my key partnerships was with our Talent Acquisition team to debias our hiring process and improve the candidate experience. Now I’m on the candidate side looking for jobs. Here’s some of my observations. Continue reading Some diversity and inclusion best practices in hiring Posted on August 21, 2020November 13, 2020Leave a comment on Some diversity and inclusion best practices in hiring Looking back, looking forward: end of year reflection and goal setting My winter holiday is coming to an end. I love that I have no idea what day of the week it is, that my new uniform is yoga pants and a hoodie, and I’ve had time to catch up with people I love. After so much rest (and cheese) I’m getting antsy to get back to my regular routine. For the past 10 years I’ve done some kind of looking back on the last year and setting goals/intentions/directions for the next one. I really enjoy this type of reflection. Here’s some free tools I’ve used to help structure that reflection. Continue reading Looking back, looking forward: end of year reflection and goal setting Posted on December 31, 2019November 6, 2020Leave a comment on Looking back, looking forward: end of year reflection and goal setting visual representation matters Recently I read an article on CBC about a project by Nicole Hill from Six Nations of the Grand River to create modern stock photos of Indigenous people because they couldn’t find representations of people like them to promote development projects. There’s been a bunch of awesome photo projects where people have created their own visual representations of their communities. Continue reading visual representation matters Posted on December 13, 2019November 6, 2020Leave a comment on visual representation matters Ally is a verb, not a noun Jeremy Dutcher‘s music is so beautiful and powerful. The way he talks about hearing his ancestors singing and laughing on archival recordings moves me in a deep way that I have a difficult time explaining with words. His Juno acceptance speech for best Indigenous Music Album was badass: he thanked his family and team, he asked the other nominees to stand up and praised their work for creating space and defying a single genre, then he called out the Canadian Prime Minister for supporting pipelines, for sending in militarized police forces into unceeded territory and for the boil water advisory that exists in many First Nations communities. He was interrupted by the music playing him off. Later the Arkells, who won the Rock Album of the Year, said a quick thank you and stepped back and invited Jeremy Dutcher to finish what he was saying. Before yesterday it was outside my imagination that a rock band would step back and give a two spirit Indigenous opera singer space their time and space on the stage. I think of allyship as a verb, not as a noun, and this was a beautiful example of this. All of this is such an inspiration for me to speak truth to power, to use some of my time to hold up my colleagues’ work on the stage, and to think about where i can step back and literally create time and space for others. Posted on March 18, 2019March 18, 2019Tags ally, diversity and inclusion, indigenous brilliancceLeave a comment on Ally is a verb, not a noun blah, blah, blah: diversity and inclusion, the code4lib edition Being asked to keynote code4lib was a literal dream come true for me. I shared some of the diversity and inclusion work we’re doing at Mozilla, called out whiteness and racism in libraries and shared some personal stuff. This wasn’t the first time I’ve cried while giving a talk, but this was the first time the tears weren’t about trauma. I was overwhelmed with the feeling of what is possible when you are loved and supported by friends and community. I had some of my dearest library friends sitting in the front row holding space for me. In my 20s and 30s my work was often fuelled by anger and I was all about burning systems down. Now that I’m in my 40s I’m exploring what it means to be fuelled by love and interdependence. I’m exploring what it means to have privilege and responsibility, and the type of work it takes to build the systems that are liberatory. It’s a new kind of vulnerability that is terrifying, yet incredibly freeing. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nWLSbIj4JjA&fbclid=IwAR22KjSBPXIFuhmGV8w5bTdx7-Lu-wrXDZCrDh3JdRN8Bsc3YcNeqBqLpEA#t=5m30s Here’s my original deck. I deviated a bit from the slides a bit in the actual talk. Continue reading blah, blah, blah: diversity and inclusion, the code4lib edition Posted on February 24, 2019November 6, 2020Tags code4lib, diversity and inclusion, libraries, racism, whitenessLeave a comment on blah, blah, blah: diversity and inclusion, the code4lib edition blah blah blah: diversity and inclusion It was such an honour to be invited to speak at National Digital Forum in Wellington. This was the biggest talk I’ve ever done and it’s the first talk I’ve done on the diversity and inclusion. I surprised myself by how emotional I got at the end and it couldn’t have been a safer place to share my ideas and my feelings. Continue reading blah blah blah: diversity and inclusion Posted on November 20, 2018November 29, 2020Tags d&i, diversity, inclusion, ndfnzLeave a comment on blah blah blah: diversity and inclusion Posts navigation Page 1 Page 2 … Page 4 Next page Proudly powered by WordPress