Supporting inclusion for LGBTQ+ team members

Women's career advancement • Keeping talent • “Please” AI -

June 17, 2025

The monday.com weekly

monday.com’s take on the latest work trends - sent on Tuesdays

Inside this issue

  • Workplace trends
  • The AI corner
  • Supporting inclusion for LGBTQ+ team members
  • Water cooler chatter
  • Question of the week
  • Just for laughs
  • Follow the monday.com weekly on LinkedIn

Workplace trends

Gender Equality

Women's career advancement hits different walls in different countries

While women face systematic barriers to leadership across India, Nigeria, and Kenya the specific obstacles vary significantly by location according to a comprehensive McKinsey study. In India, women struggle from the very beginning, representing just 33% of entry-level workers despite making up 48% of university students, with representation dropping sharply to 24% at the manager level before stabilizing. Nigeria shows a different pattern where women maintain steady representation once they enter the workforce, but face severe barriers to initial employment.Kenya demonstrates yet another challenge, with women starting at a relatively strong 41% of entry-level positions but experiencing a "double dip" decline as they advance, dropping to just 27% at the C-suite level. The findings suggest that workplace equality requires companies to consider targeted solutions rather than one-size-fits-all approaches. Each country needs to address its specific bottlenecks to unlock women's full leadership potential.

 

Talent

Smart questions beat big paychecks for keeping stars

A 15-year study tracking over 1,000 job changes has shattered conventional wisdom about employee retention, revealing that traditional strategies like salary bumps and fancy titles are failing to keep top talent from jumping ship. Workers now switch jobs every 3.9 years on average, driven by 30 complex forces including remote work options, company culture misalignment, and lack of professional development, according to Harvard Business School. The research exposes that over 75% of job switchers aren't climbing the corporate ladder but seeking horizontal moves for schedule flexibility, skill diversification, or different challenges that reignite their professional enthusiasm. Management experts warn that companies that continue to rely solely on financial incentives are missing the mark.

The AI corner

User Behavior

Why saying "please" to ChatGPT might make you happier

With digital interactions becoming increasingly common in professional settings, a surprising 67% of US AI users report showing politeness toward AI search engines, according to TechRadar. The user behaviour has even prompted OpenAI CEO Sam Altman to joke that the courtesy costs his company "tens of millions of dollars" in extra processing power annually. While AI systems genuinely don't appreciate manners, research suggests the habit may benefit humans in unexpected ways. According to psychologists Robert Emmons and Michael McCullough, practicing gratitude regularly leads to 25% higher happiness levels, better emotional resilience, and improved physical health. Communication researchers suggest that treating AI systems with politeness may reinforce courteous communication habits that positively influence how we interact with others.

 

Manpower

AI is reshaping jobs faster than workers can adapt

Companies are rapidly moving beyond AI experimentation into full workplace implementation, changing how people do their jobs across industries. UK grocery technology company Ocado demonstrates this shift clearly - with AI-driven automation cutting the human labor needed to fulfill a 50-item order from 25 minutes in 2012 to just 10 minutes today, a leap in efficiency that has contributed to 500 job cuts in 2025. Some organizations are using AI to help current workers accomplish more, while others pursue the same output with fewer employees, creating what recruitment experts call a "two-speed economy" between AI-adopting workplaces and those that aren't. This divide is already reflected in wages, with workers possessing AI skills now asking 56% higher salaries than their counterparts without such knowledge, up from 25% the previous year, according to PwC research.

Supporting inclusion for LGBTQ+ team members

Incredible things can happen when employees feel comfortable bringing their authentic selves to work. Collaboration improves by 50%, according to Harvard Business Review, and companies also reap the benefits of greater thought diversity, which fuels innovation and performance. Unfortunately, even in 2025, many inclusion practices still don’t extend to LGBTQ+ employees in the way that they should.

 

A Deloitte study found that only 35% of LGBTQ+ workers believe their employer demonstrates inclusion both internally and externally. Meanwhile, 43% say their employer does neither, and one in three workers is actively searching for a more inclusive workplace.

 

Challenges for LGBTQ+ team members often stem from microaggressions or exclusionary behaviors that leave them feeling unseen or even unsafe — and the consequences can range from quiet quitting to increased turnover. That’s where a leader can make all the difference. The way you show up, the voices you amplify, and the culture you create can turn inclusion from a buzzword into a core element of workplace culture. But your actions must be intentional.

 

So, how can you create a more inclusive experience for LGBTQ+ team members?

 

Encourage pronoun sharing

Assuming an employee’s pronouns can make them feel uncomfortable or disregarded, and may even contribute to a toxic workplace. It’s important to help everyone feel included without singling anyone out, and a great way to do this is by modeling the use of pronouns. Think about including your pronouns in your email signature and other profiles to signal that everyone is respected and valued on your team. You might even share your pronouns when introducing yourself to new hires to showcase inclusive behavior. This helps reinforce the idea that gender identity shouldn't be assumed based on names or appearances, and that everyone should be seen for who they are.

 

Immediately address microaggressions

Don’t ignore microaggressions when they happen. If left unaddressed, they can continue and quietly create a hostile workplace. One of the most difficult things about microaggressions is that they’re often disguised as compliments or attempts at support. For instance, someone might respond to learning a teammate’s sexual orientation by saying they’re “surprised”. While they may believe they’re being reassuring, comments like this can disrespect a person’s identity and reinforce harmful stereotypes. These are opportunities for education, not shame, so that everyone can learn and grow in how they show respect. If you as a leader see someone exhibit a microaggression, respond respectfully and clearly in the moment, taking the person to the side and explaining why the comment wasn’t appropriate. Addressing exclusion in real-time is one of the most effective ways to shift behaviors and mindsets.

 

Create inclusive team activities

Gendered activities can undermine inclusivity. For example, hosting a hackathon with men vs. women teams or inviting “spouses” to a holiday party may exclude people in different types of relationships. Choose activities that are open to everyone by asking the team for suggestions and letting them vote on favorites. Remember that nobody should need to code-switch their identity for these events; get-togethers should be neutral grounds for everyone to feel welcome.

 

Support inclusive policies

As a leader, you can advocate for policies that support LGBTQ+ team members equally. Start by familiarizing yourself with your company’s benefits and ensure they include trans-inclusive healthcare, mental health resources, inclusive family leave, and nondiscrimination protections. If they don’t, share your feedback with HR, and invite your team into the conversation if they feel comfortable. This can give your LGBTQ+ team members the foundations for their workplace wellbeing, so they can build a long-term future at your company.

 

Continue to learn

Building inclusive teams require ongoing attention, so commit to continuous learning. Attend LGBTQ+ allyship training and share key takeaways with your team via team messaging channels. Podcasts, videos, or articles are also great and simple ways to stay in-the-know. When you show that learning is part of your leadership, others will likely follow, and the whole team will benefit.

Water cooler chatter

David Beckham is finally getting his knighthood. After years of waiting, the former England captain will be recognized in King Charles' Birthday Honours, marking the end of a long journey that included leaked emails showing his frustration at being overlooked, criticism over his Qatar World Cup ambassadorship, and various financial controversies.

"He is a great ambassador for football and the country. We all see the charity work that he has done for many years and I am sure he will continue to do that."

- Wayne Rooney, former England teammate

A developer created a website that lets people fake their runs on fitness apps. Arthur Bouffard's "Fake My Run" generates fraudulent workout data, complete with GPS routes and heart rate information that can be uploaded to platforms like Strava. Over 200,000 people have visited the site since its launch, while Strava has already begun banning accounts that use the service.

"It made me think of how this whole hobby has become more and more performative. What had happened to jogging for the pleasure of it, without the need for outside validation?"

- Arthur Bouffard, Creator of Fake My Run

Question of the week

Last week’s answer: Staplers

This week’s question: According to the designer of Apple’s original logo, why does it have a bite in it? One of the options below is correct.

 

A. For scale, so that people wouldn’t mistake it for a cherry

B. Garden of Eden reference, when Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit

C. A play on words with the computer term “byte”

D. An homage to Snow White, the designer’s favorite movie

Just for laughs

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