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Belonging vs. Uniqueness – Why Both Matter

“I just want to feel like I belong.”

It’s a common desire—but in the workplace, it’s only half the story.

Inclusion isn’t just about belonging. It’s also about being valued for what makes you different. And that’s a much harder, more ambitious leadership goal.

In our book Simplifying Inclusive Leadership (coming Autumn 2025), we explore how true inclusion is rooted in two psychological needs:

  1. The need to belong—to feel accepted and connected to others.
  2. The need to be recognised for your uniqueness—your identity, experiences, and perspectives.

You need both to feel truly included.


The Paradox of Inclusion

Catalyst (2014) summarise it well:

“Employees feel included when, simultaneously, they perceive they are both similar to and distinct from their coworkers.”

But this is where many leaders get stuck. It’s easier to foster team bonding around shared values and common ground. It’s harder—and more courageous—to value difference and make room for perspectives that challenge the norm.

Inclusion doesn’t mean assimilation. It means equity.


Belonging Without Uniqueness Is Not Enough

If your organisation promotes belonging without embracing difference, you create a system where people feel pressure to “fit in” by muting aspects of themselves.

And the data shows this is a widespread issue:
👉 66% of employees say they feel pressure to downplay part of their identity at work.
This creates a sense of internal conflict and ultimately drives disengagement, turnover, and missed innovation.

Real inclusion allows people to bring their full selves to work—not just the parts that mirror the dominant group.


What Inclusive Leaders Do Differently

Inclusive leaders recognise that:

  • Belonging isn’t about conformity.
  • Uniqueness isn’t a threat to unity.
  • Different people need different things to feel valued, seen, and safe.

They create conditions where diversity and difference are actively welcomed, not simply tolerated. And that takes intention, skill, and strategy—not just good intentions.


Blogs

The evolution of implicit bias: what leaders need to know

What if one of the biggest debates in inclusion has been built on asking the wrong question?For years, discussions about implicit bias have often focused on whether people consciously hold prejudiced attitudes. Yet a major 2026 review by B. Keith Payne, published in the Annual Review of Psychology, suggests the science has moved well beyond that debate....
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Blogs

Microaggressions are not just individual acts. They are shaped by culture.

When conversations about microaggressions emerge, attention often focuses on the individuals involved. Was harm intended? Was someone being overly sensitive? Did the person mean what was perceived?...
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Blogs

When visibility becomes vulnerability: the hidden cost of speaking up online

Based on Farley et al.’s (2026) scoping review in Behavioral Sciences, one of the fastest growing yet least discussed inclusion challenges may be happening outside the workplace itself....
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