It is often said that companies looking to affect positive change have to set the proper tone from the top of the organization. It requires a level of connection and trust at all staff levels, including frontline workers. However, while 79% of frontline workers surveyed for the study said they trust their immediate coworkers, 71% said they trust their company’s leadership team. The level of trust frontline workers feel for senior leaders also differs significantly by company size: 84% of frontline staff working for companies with 250–999 employees said they trusted senior leaders, compared to only 57% that work for companies with 5,000 employees or more.
Ultimately, a lack of trust can manifest in a variety of damaging ways, including lost productivity or lack of employee retention. It is particularly important when it comes to DEI given how personal it is for each member of the workforce. It can also feed a perception among frontline workers that the company’s focus on DEI is more about looking good than it is about truly creating a better workplace for all employees (figure 1).
Another major challenge is that many frontline workers often feel discriminated against. Study results indicate that a significant number of frontline workers report having been discriminated against by either a coworker (32%) or customer (40%). Digging deeper, nearly a quarter of women and a third of Black/African American frontline workers report having been discriminated against by either a customer or coworker, on the basis of their gender and race/ethnicity, respectively. In fact, only half of Black/African American and Hispanic/LatinX workers report having not been the victim of some form of discrimination. This contributes to a variety of outcomes, including the fact that only a third of overall survey respondents feel they can be their authentic selves at work (figure 2).