Head of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
Role overview
As Head of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, you are accountable for the organisation's fairness, inclusion, and social legitimacy across a complex and evolving workforce. You lead the organisation's inclusion strategy, supported by modern people, compliance, and insight tools that provide continuous data, benchmarking, and draft analysis across hiring, progression, reward, and employee experience.
You act as a senior adviser to the executive on workforce risk, cultural health, and regulatory exposure. While much of the underlying data, reporting, and first-draft analysis is generated through automated and semi-automated systems, you remain responsible for the judgement, interpretation, and decisions that shape how the organisation responds. Your role is to ensure that what the tools surface is turned into fair, lawful, and strategically sound action.
Core responsibilities
- Own the organisation's enterprise-wide diversity, equity, and inclusion strategy, ensuring it is grounded in robust evidence, aligned with business priorities, and defensible to regulators, employees, and external stakeholders.
- Act as the executive authority on workforce fairness, advising the Board, Executive Committee, and senior leaders on risks, trade-offs, and options highlighted through people and compliance insight.
- Review, validate, and approve analyses, reports, and recommendations generated through D&I, HR, and compliance tooling, ensuring they are accurate, balanced, and appropriately contextualised.
- Translate complex workforce data into clear strategic guidance for leaders, supporting decisions on hiring, promotion, restructuring, reward, and organisational design.
- Identify and manage emerging legal, reputational, and cultural risks, using automated monitoring and benchmarking to surface issues early and guide proportionate, effective responses.
- Set standards for the responsible use of D&I-related data, models, and tools, ensuring that inclusion and fairness are not compromised by poor data quality, inappropriate automation, or unexamined assumptions.
- Represent the organisation externally on issues of workforce equity, inclusion, and social responsibility, supported by credible, evidence-based reporting.
Key activities
- Use internal people, compliance, and insight tools to review continuously-updated indicators of representation, pay, progression, engagement, and inclusion, focusing attention on areas where the organisation is exposed to risk, underperformance, or reputational harm.
- Work from first-draft strategies, action plans, reports, and briefing materials generated by internal systems and specialist tools, refining them into executive-level recommendations and decisions that reflect organisational priorities, legal obligations, and cultural realities.
- Review exception reports and alerts produced by workforce and compliance tooling (for example on emerging pay gaps, attrition risks, regulatory changes, or employee sentiment), and determine when investigation, intervention, or escalation is required.
- Prepare senior leadership briefings and Board materials by validating and interpreting structured insights, scenario outputs, and benchmarking data, and translating them into clear options, trade-offs, and recommended actions.
- Direct targeted reviews or interventions where automated monitoring indicates potential inequality, exclusion, or systemic bias, ensuring that both the evidence and the organisational response are appropriate, proportionate, and defensible.
- Oversee the quality, integrity, and appropriate use of D&I-related data, models, and reporting tools, ensuring that leaders are working from accurate, fair, and properly contextualised information.
- Act as the senior point of judgement when automated or standardised approaches are insufficient, resolving complex, ambiguous, or politically sensitive workforce issues that require human authority and discretion.
Capabilities and skills
- Deep professional expertise in workforce equity, inclusion, and employment regulation within large, complex organisations.
- Strong analytical and strategic reasoning, with the ability to interpret structured data, summaries, and scenario outputs and turn them into sound organisational decisions.
- Sound judgement in assessing the reliability, limitations, and risks of AI-assisted insights, automated reports, and draft recommendations.
- High-level communication skills, with the ability to explain sensitive, complex, or controversial workforce issues clearly to senior leaders, regulators, and external stakeholders.
- Strong understanding of legal, ethical, and governance standards related to people data, algorithmic decision-making, and equality.
- The credibility and confidence to operate at Board and executive level, influencing decisions that shape the organisation's workforce, culture, and reputation.
KPIs and measures of success
- Demonstrable fairness and equity across key workforce outcomes, including representation, progression, pay, retention, and engagement.
- Executive and Board confidence in the quality, clarity, and reliability of D&I-related insight, reporting, and advice.
- Timely identification and effective management of workforce, legal, and reputational risks linked to inclusion, discrimination, or bias.
- External credibility with regulators, investors, and employees, supported by consistent, evidence-based reporting.
- Responsible and compliant use of D&I-related data, tools, and automation, with no material breaches of equality law, data protection, or ethical standards.
Stakeholders
- Board and Executive Committee
- HR, Reward, Talent, and People Analytics leadership
- Risk, Legal, Compliance, and Data Governance teams
- Employee representative bodies and networks
- External regulators, benchmarks, and accreditation bodies
- Communications and corporate affairs teams
Inclusion and equal opportunities
We are committed to building a fair, inclusive, and respectful workplace where people from all backgrounds can succeed. We welcome applications from candidates with diverse experiences and perspectives, and we value professional judgement, integrity, and curiosity as highly as formal credentials.
Role overview
What has changed:
The focus shifts from leading programmes and initiatives to being the executive authority on workforce fairness, inclusion, and organisational legitimacy. The role is now explicitly supported by people, compliance, and insight tools that generate data, summaries, and draft analysis, while accountability for decisions and outcomes remains with the role holder.
How it helps:
This positions the Head of D&I as a senior decision-maker rather than an operational delivery lead. It reinforces that value comes from judgement, governance, and credibility with leaders, regulators, and employees, not from producing reports or running campaigns.
Core responsibilities
What has changed:
Responsibilities move from designing and running activity to reviewing, approving, and acting on evidence and recommendations generated through D&I, HR, and compliance tooling. Greater emphasis is placed on advising the executive, managing risk, and ensuring legal and ethical defensibility.
How it helps:
This reflects the reality that leaders will expect faster, more data-driven insight into workforce issues. The role remains accountable for fairness and compliance while operating at a more strategic and influential level.
Key activities
What has changed:
Day-to-day work now assumes access to automated or semi-automated reporting, alerts, benchmarks, and draft outputs. The Head of D&I focuses on interpreting these outputs, deciding when action is required, and directing proportionate responses.
How it helps:
This grounds the future role in recognisable activities such as reviewing reports, briefing leaders, and managing risks, while showing how manual analysis and content creation are increasingly handled by supporting tools.
Capabilities and skills
What has changed:
Core expertise in inclusion, employment law, and organisational culture remains central, but there is increased emphasis on assessing the reliability and limitations of automated insight, and on exercising judgement over data-driven recommendations.
How it helps:
This reinforces that the role does not require technical expertise in AI, but does require confidence in using technology responsibly and in knowing when human judgement must override automated outputs.
KPIs and measures of success
What has changed:
Success is measured less by volume of activity and more by the quality, fairness, and defensibility of workforce outcomes, alongside the effective use of insight and monitoring tools to identify and manage risk.
How it helps:
This supports a future in which technology increases leverage without turning the role into a purely efficiency-driven function. It aligns performance with organisational trust, regulatory compliance, and long-term workforce health.
Stakeholders
What has changed:
Alongside traditional stakeholders such as the Board, HR, and employee groups, the role now works more closely with people analytics, compliance, and technology teams that support D&I insight and reporting.
How it helps:
This reflects a more data-enabled operating environment while keeping reporting lines and core relationships familiar and stable.
Inclusion and equal opportunities
What has changed:
The inclusion statement remains consistent in intent, with a clearer emphasis on accessibility, potential, and fairness in hiring and progression.
How it helps:
This ensures continuity of purpose even as the tools, skills, and operating model of the role evolve.