We’ve all heard the buzzwords: authenticity, belonging, psychological safety. But beneath the headlines, how do we actually define inclusive leadership in a way that’s both evidence-based and practically useful?
In our book, Simplifying Inclusive Leadership, we bring together the best of academic research and corporate practice to demystify what inclusive leadership really means—and why it matters more than ever in today’s organisations.
Let’s start by unpacking the concept.
Corporate vs. Academic Perspectives
Corporate thought leadership has long claimed that inclusive leaders are essential for retaining diverse talent and fostering innovation. One consistent thread? The idea that inclusion balances two human needs: belonging and uniqueness. A person should feel they belong because of their differences, not in spite of them.
Catalyst (2014) frames it perfectly:
“Employees feel included when, simultaneously, they perceive they are both similar to and distinct from their coworkers.”
The academic literature largely agrees. Definitions highlight leaders who are accessible, visible, and appreciative of others’ contributions. Yet many of these definitions stop short of addressing diversity—especially from the viewpoint of marginalised groups.
This is where our model steps in.
A More Inclusive Definition
We define inclusive leadership as a practice—not just a trait—through which leaders enable others to experience belonging while feeling valued for their diversity and uniqueness.
Inclusive leaders hold strong pro-diversity beliefs. They go beyond lip service to “diversity of thought” and proactively dismantle the systemic barriers that exclude underrepresented voices. They don’t just create space—they reshape the system so that space is equitably shared.
Why This Matters Now
Without inclusion, diversity can be destabilising. Diverse teams without psychological safety often become chaotic, disengaged, or even litigious. Inclusion is the glue that makes diversity work.
If you’re a leader committed to empowering your team, you need more than good intentions. You need a grounded, practical understanding of what inclusion actually looks like in action.
