Black Friday Sale! 50% Off All Access

4 Ways Black Diversity Leaders Succeed, and How Executive Peers Can Make Sure They Do When you are a high-performing Chief Diversity Officer, you lead a center of excellence that improves company results with talent and customers by reducing bias and generating opportunity.

By Chuck H. Shelton Edited by Micah Zimmerman

Entrepreneur+ Black Friday Sale

Our biggest sale — Get unlimited access to Entrepreneur.com at an unbeatable price. Use code SAVE50 at checkout.*

Claim Offer

*Offer only available to new subscribers

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

In a previous article, I explored several reasons Black diversity officers struggle and how their CEOs can help. That opens the door to more straight talk about how the leaders themselves can step into their success and how their executive colleagues can be part of that success story.

I focus on diversity leaders who identify as Black for three reasons: a majority of diversity leaders in America are Black, their Blackness matters and the opportunities they have are familiar to every diversity leader. At this point in history, inclusive leaders are learning to focus on race and keep other aspects of identity in view simultaneously.

Let's look at four ways you, as a diversity leader — or as one of your executive peers — can thrive in this vital role.

1. Ensure that the Diversity Leader's role is scoped and resourced for achievement

The 'DEI Why' has to be clear and achievable. Yes, it's crucial to have an aspirational vision for the work, but the successful DEI leader equips other leaders to build their point of view around DEI and lead more inclusively. When you are a high-performing Chief Diversity Officer, you lead a center of excellence that improves company results with talent and customers by reducing bias and generating opportunity.

So your success as a DEI leader is at serious risk if soaring expectations for what you will achieve languish from a laughably small budget and insufficient sponsorship.

The CEO and CHRO come in here, ensuring that the agenda, objectives, resources and metrics owned by the diversity leader are reasonable, impactful and communicated. Like any investment, the right team and an actual budget will produce returns.

Every executive peer to a diversity leader should be asking a behavioral question: How am I substantively supporting our CDO's success?

Related: These Are the Biggest Blind Spots in Diversity Initiatives, According to 8 Women Experts

2. The organization is investing in the Diversity Leader's development

Diversity leaders get to improve like every employee. The right commitment to a Black CDO's growth includes two investments:

  • Business Savvy — Integrate the CDO into the business's goals, challenges and budgeting core, certainly in policy development, key customer relationships and strategy building with the Board. Center DEI in the company by centering the senior diversity leader in how decisions are made and resources are assigned.
  • Competency Building — Every executive has room to grow. CDOs need active, personal guidance for establishing their brand, optimizing their strengths and minimizing their shortcomings. Black diversity leaders, in particular, require empathetic and honest feedback because white colleagues, in particular, may have been afraid to provide them with the right mix of praise and coaching for improvement. If you're a white executive like me, commit to care and honesty to grow a relationship of trust with your CDO.

3. The Diversity Leader relies on influence partners

The critical context for executive success is peer relationship quality, especially for Black DEI leaders. If trust is "the making and keeping of promises over time and across differences," and accountability is "behaving in ways that grow trust," then it is no surprise that diversity leaders of every identity thrive when surrounded by high-trust relationships with their peers in senior leadership.

You know you're an influence partner for your CDO when you're asking yourself two questions: How can I follow their expertise and leadership to become a more effective and inclusive leader myself? In what other ways am I supporting her success?

One of my favorite metrics, especially if you are a black CDO, is the number of executives influence partners you enjoy.

Related: 7 Ways Leaders Can Level Up Their DEI Workplace Strategy

4. The Diversity Leader is disciplined about self-care and leads with an authentic voice

I'm speaking directly to Diversity Leaders here: You know it's going well when you're not struggling to care for yourself, and people are listening to you. You succeed when work is not overwhelming, your voice and agency are growing, and your self-doubt finds little traction. Personal renewal is a challenge for every senior leader — for every adult human, for that matter — and the amount of energy you are spending to remember to care for yourself and then doing so is an excellent indicator of your efficacy as a DEI leader.

To those who serve as an influence partner to a Black CDO in particular, I offer this: attend to their wellness as friends and colleagues. Are they taking vacations? Are they working 60 or more hours every week? Do you regularly hear them laugh? Are their teams hitting deadlines and generating good ideas? The pandemic is teaching us to lead with genuine empathy, and diversity leaders in your organization deserve as much honest care as you can.

Related: Self-Care for Small Business Owners and Entrepreneurs

The senior diversity leader in your firm, and their team, embody and lead the organization's commitment to DEI as a strategy to dramatically grow the company's performance and character. If you're in such a role, dial into your success factors, and deprioritize everything else. To focus like this, secure the support from those above you and a growing circle of your influence partners. And if you are a peer to a Chief Diversity Officer, you can play a key role in her success.

When diversity executives thrive, the DEI initiative produces results for the business. So we need our CDOs to succeed. Each one of us can help that happen.

Related: 5 Examples of Unconscious Bias at Work and How to Solve Them

Chuck H. Shelton

Entrepreneur Leadership Network® Contributor

CEO and Founder of Greatheart Consulting

Chuck H. Shelton is a vocal advocate and executive with 40 years of experience in inclusive leadership. He and his team come alongside all leaders, challenging them to take personal responsibility for shifting cultures and systems towards greater equity and inclusion.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business News

The Two Richest People in the World Are Fighting on Social Media Again

Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk had a new, contentious exchange on X.

Business News

Barbara Corcoran Says This Is the Interest Rate Magic Number That Will Make the Market 'Go Ballistic'

Corcoran said she praying for lower interest rates and people are "tired of waiting."

Money & Finance

Why Donald Trump's Business-First Policies Trump Harris' Consumer-Centric Approach

President Donald Trump's pro-business agenda is packed with policy moves encouraging investment to drive economic growth. The next Congress has a unique opportunity to support entrepreneurship and innovation, improving U.S. competitiveness with the rest of the world.

Business News

Here's How Much Money You Need to Make in Order to Be 'Successful,' According to Each Generation

A new survey by Empower outlines how Americans of different ages define success.