In early 2022, the AE firm SSOE Group’s Board of Directors reiterated its commitment to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI). Thus began a journey that found SSOE moving toward a more representative mix of diverse employees within its nearly 1,500-person workforce, on project teams and in corporate groups.
This mandate led to the formation of advocacy groups for underrepresented employees within the company, as well as changes in SSOE’s hiring practices and employee benefits. It has also placed SSOE in a better position to compete for projects from developers and organizations (especially in the public sector) that are seeking partners with well-defined DEI programs.
A growing number of AEC firms have been looking at themselves critically through DEI lenses that have brought into sharper relief shortcomings in their human resource policies and programs. These assessments are also being conducted at a time when a company’s DEI reputation can be a determinative factor in where skilled and educated employees choose to work.
SSOE Group can be seen as a case study for how AEC firms are adapting to employees’ shifting expectations of more-inclusive work cultures.
Top-down support for DEI efforts
Catherine Myers, PE, SSOE’s President, notes that prior to its latest actions, the firm didn’t have a specific DEI-focused group that was directly connected to the Board of Directors. That changed when, in March 2022, SSOE added a DEI committee to its Board, and hired its first Director of DEI, Candice Harrison, who had previously been external communications manager for the Toledo (Ohio) Public Schools.
To encourage team buy-in, SSOE held global DEI roundtable discussions in small groups. More than 15 percent of the company’s workers responded to questions that probed their understanding of DEI, why they thought improvements were important for the company, and what challenges in its execution might arise.
Outcomes from these sessions helped to establish DEI priorities such as enhancing diversity in the talent pipeline and setting metrics and management tools.
DEI groups give voice to different employees
After completing this company-wide assessment, SSOE Group formed internal Employee Resource Groups (ERG) to give greater voice to its underrepresented workers. One group, the Black Leaders and Collaborative Change Makers (BLACC), initially had 25 active members; the PRIDE group for LGBTQ+ individuals had 27 members; and there were 72 participants in the Women’s ERG. (At the time, SSOE had very few women in its engineering and architecture departments, particularly in leadership roles. And female technical employees created a subgroup because they had different needs regarding representation and support than the larger Women’s ERG.)
Participation in the ERGs was voluntary but strongly encouraged. Each group had at least one member of leadership as an executive sponsor who sometimes came from outside the respective underrepresented group.
Each ERG devised its own mission statement and charter, as well as a leadership/management hierarchy. Broad objectives were refined for specific actions that could range from recognizing holidays like Martin Luther King Day to revising time-off policies. Each ERG meets monthly, and in their first year, the groups were instrumental in strategic benefits planning and Lean Operating Strategy initiatives. The BLACC group assisted SSOE’s human resources department in recruitment events, and invited Dr. Melvin Garvey, the author of Dear White Friend, to speak about DEI.
SSOE has partnered with Historically Black Colleges and Universities such as Tennessee State, through which the firm conferred its first scholarship. The firm’s DEI program also partnered with the National Society of Black Engineers and the Society of Women Engineers. SSOE developed corporate metrics that impact the entire company related to DEI. Tracking those markets is tied to performance, which encourages corporate accountability.
The PRIDE ERG partnered with Hummingbird Humanity, a DEI consulting firm, to help the group elucidate the history of the gay pride movement and to dive deeper into gender identity.
DEI can provide a competitive edge
As part of its DEI journey, SSOE Group conducts virtual training sessions on diversity. The firm required attendance for employees to receive their bonuses. According to Harrison, the focus of SSOE’s diversity efforts has been to embed DEI into daily operations, “creating a space where our employees feel as though they can bring their whole selves to work and have a sense of belonging.”
As the cultivation of these values becomes more intensified, SSOE can distinguish itself with potential partners and incoming employees. “What we’ve developed is more focused on measurement,” said a company spokesperson.
Related Stories
| Jan 3, 2012
Art Gensler: Still Making a Difference for Clients Every Day
After running what is today the largest architecture firm in the world for more than four decades, M. Arthur Gensler, Jr., FAIA, FIIDA, RIBA, is content to be just another employee at the firm that bears his name.
| Jan 3, 2012
Gensler: 'The One Firm Firm'
The giant architecture firm succeeds by giving each of its more than 3,000 employees the opportunity for career growth and professional leadership.
| Jan 3, 2012
Rental Renaissance, The Rebirth of the Apartment Market
Across much of the U.S., apartment rents are rising, vacancy rates are falling. In just about every major urban area, new multifamily rental projects and major renovations are coming online. It may be too soon to pronounce the rental market fully recovered, but the trend is promising.
| Dec 29, 2011
Seismic safety in question at thousands of California public schools
California regulators responsible for enforcing earthquake safety laws have failed to certify more than 16,000 construction projects in California public schools, increasing the risk that some projects may be unsafe, according to a state audit report.
| Dec 29, 2011
GreenWizard offers cloud-based LEED credit management, assessment
The company recently began offering companies the ability to run assessments for design credits, in addition to traditional product-specific LEED credits.
| Dec 27, 2011
Clayco awarded expansion of Washington University Data Center in St. Louis
Once completed, the new building addition will double the size of the data center which houses sophisticated computer networks that store massive amounts of genomic data used to identify the genetic origins of cancer and other diseases.
| Dec 27, 2011
Ground broken for adaptive reuse project
Located on the Garden State Parkway, the master-planned project initially includes the conversion of a 114-year-old, 365,000-square-foot, six-story warehouse building into 361 loft-style apartments, and the creation of a three-level parking facility.
| Dec 27, 2011
Nova completes $60M Clearwater Conference Center
Comprising an entire city block, the 450,000 sq. ft. facility features over 400 meeting rooms, six theaters, a full-service health spa, complete with an indoor running track, and a commercial kitchen that can efficiently accommodate over 1,000 diners
| Dec 27, 2011
BD+C's Under 40 Leadership Summit update
The two-day Under 40 Leadership Summit continued with a Leadership Style interactive presentation; Great Solutions presentations from Under 40 attendees; the Owner’s Perspective panel discussion; and the Blue Ocean Strategy presentation.
| Dec 27, 2011
Suffolk Construction celebrates raising of Boston Tea Party Ships & Museum cupola
Topping off ceremony held on 238th Anniversary of Boston Tea Party.