Tag: diversity accreditation

  • Why EDI Accreditation Shouldn’t Be a Tick-Box Exercise

    Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) accreditation must be credible, evidence-based, and focused on real impact. Real EDI progress comes from data, evidence, and employee insight — not simple yes/no answers.

    Accreditation exists to confirm whether an organisation meets defined standards. As outlined in why accreditation matters,  and explained in our article on what makes accrEDIted different, the value of accreditation depends on the strength of its standards and the rigour of its assessment process.

    Many schemes rely heavily on self-assessment, allowing organisations to confirm their compliance without providing evidence. While this may work in some contexts, EDI accreditation requires a more robust approach. Inclusion is complex, intersectional, and rarely captured through simple yes/no answers.

    Some workplace programs illustrate this perfectly. For example, the Disability Confident Scheme, designed to reduce disability discrimination, allows organisations to be members without employing a single disabled person. This has rightly been branded performative and ineffective. Such examples highlight why tick-box accreditation cannot capture or induce meaningful EDI outcomes.

    Meaningful EDI assessment requires independent scrutiny. Our approach to independent oversight ensures standards are applied consistently and performance is assessed objectively, strengthening credibility and confidence in the outcomes.

    Organisations have made progress in collecting EDI workforce data in recent years. However, data is often incomplete, underused or not analysed at all, limiting its value. Without evidence-based analysis, organisations miss critical insights into representation, progression and workplace culture.

    Credible EDI accreditation requires evidence for every measure. This includes analysing workforce data and capturing employee experience through cultural assessment. These elements are embedded within our framework, which is designed to deliver comprehensive, intersectional EDI measurement.

    When accreditation fails to measure real outcomes, it risks becoming performative. Strong EDI standards must reflect best practice, drive improvement, and support continuous progress rather than one-off certification. Our accreditation ensures assessment goes beyond compliance and drives real impact.

    Effective EDI accreditation frameworks encourage organisations to embed inclusion into strategy, monitor progress over time, and remain accountable. Our framework supports this by setting clear expectations and measuring progress year on year.

    EDI accreditation should not be about compliance alone. It should provide a trusted benchmark, meaningful insight, and a clear path to lasting change.

    Find out how our framework can be the start of your credible, evidence-based EDI accreditation journey.