For construction company managers

DEI doesn’t fail on paper. It fails in communication.

On busy sites, communication is your safety system for people: clarity, respect, feedback, and follow-through. Strong communication supports Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) in practical ways, especially across cultures.

5
minute manager checklist
3
steps: clarify → confirm → close the loop
1
standard for respectful communication
Manager Briefing
Build trust. Reduce rework. Keep people.

What this site covers

  • Why DEI needs specific communication behaviors
  • Why cross-cultural communication is harder on site
  • Skills and strategies managers can standardize
  • Podcast-based examples and a manager checklist
High-risk moments handoffs, RFIs, safety talks, discipline
Cultural friction points tone, directness, status, idioms
Best practice confirm understanding (repeat-back)
Manager standard clear expectations + follow-through

What managers should do differently (starting Monday)

These behaviors reduce misunderstanding across cultures and make DEI practices stick on real job sites.

Stop “assuming” — start confirming

Ask what the facts are, then confirm the next step. Avoid labeling people or situations too early.

Tool: “What are the facts?” + “What else is going on?”

Use plain language on purpose

Short words. Short sentences. Concrete details. No slang/idioms in critical instructions.

Example: “Install by Friday 3pm” beats “ASAP.”

Close the loop (every time)

Restate tasks, who owns them, and the deadline. Then follow up in writing when it matters.

Script: “To confirm: you’ll… by… If blocked, call…”