“Inclusion” without disability is still exclusion. (You don’t have to hate disabled people to be ableist) You just have to: - ignore disability in your policies & DEI strategy - treat ADA compliance as your only finish line - forget to budget for needed accommodations - hire for “culture fit” but avoid disabled talent Ableism doesn’t always sound like hate. In fact, ableism is usually just silence. Silence around underrepresentatuon Silence around reasonable accommodations Silence around stigma & bias toward disability That’s what this iceberg shows. Above the surface: good intentions. Below the surface: harmful inaction. As a person with a visible & invisible disability, I get frustrated for a few reasons but the main issue? Disability inclusion isn’t charity. There’s a clear business case for disability inclusion. Companies that lean into disability inclusion earn: 28% higher revenue 30% higher profit margins Still, 90% of companies claim to prioritize diversity but only 4% include disability in their DEI efforts. The human case is there. The business case is there. So what’s missing? Change. But what does real change look like? It’s not just a wheelchair icon or checking a box. It’s: - listening to disabled voices - auditing ableist hiring practices - measuring equity, not just optics - hiring/promoting disabled leaders - funding reasonable accommodations Ableism is the iceberg. Don’t let your culture sink with it. ♻️ Share so we can end ableism #DisabilityInclusion #EndAbleism #InclusiveLeadership #AccessibilityMatters #EquityInAction [image description: A graphic on a tan background that shows an iceberg in the middle. The title says the ableism iceberg and above the water is six statements: everyone is included, we don’t discriminate, disability imagery, ADA compliant, disability ERG, inclusion matters. Below the water it says what’s missing: no disabled bleeders, systemic in accessibility, ableist policies, ablest hiring process, invisible disability bias, neurodivergent erasure, no accommodations budget.]
Love this, Chris. Nailed it!
This is a really fantastic concept and post. I feel like ADA compliance should honestly be right on the waterline perhaps, given how many employers completely fail to even meet that (very low) bar!
Love this, Chris. It's easier to have the facade of neurodiversity at work, than to have the actual practices, support, etc. Of course, in a different comment, someone explained to me as not in the majority I am statistically not normal...so abnormal. Gotta love being a number and not a human being. 🫣 🤐
YES! Very insightful and thought-provoking illustration. Thank you , Chris!
Fully agree lack of understanding what it really takes to not just talk the talk but actually do the action required to make space.
Missing 'not understanding micro agressions'
Such an important reminder. Real inclusion takes consistent action behind the scenes, not just checking boxes or putting up the right signs
Equity vs Equality means everyone is equal in their own way. So accommodations are important in order to put everyone on a level playing field. This way no one’s disability is a factor in creating barriers to opportunities.
"That’s what this iceberg shows. Above the surface: good intentions. Below the surface: harmful inaction." powerful frame of reference
Global Strategic Account Executive Manager
1moAnother wonderful example and reasons for the importance of always asking "Whose voices are in the room when the decisions and policies are made?" 💡👏🏾