Week 3 Recap: What Black Employees Are Still Asking Workplaces to Change (Days 14–20)
This week in the 28 Things Black People Actually Want From Their Employers series, the focus moved deeper into the everyday systems and norms that quietly shape workplace culture, from how organizations support community and rest to how they handle communication, conflict, and responsibility.
Here’s a quick look at this week’s reflections:
Day 14: Affinity Spaces Are Real Care, Not Extras
Workplace care is structural. Supported, protected, and funded affinity spaces give Black employees room to connect, process, and lead, and they play a critical role in retention and well-being.👉🏽 Read the full post
Day 15: Conflict Avoidance Undermines Equity
When organizations prioritize comfort over clarity, feedback gets delayed, decisions become opaque, and employees are left guessing. Inclusive cultures require leaders who can communicate directly, transparently, and courageously.👉🏽 Read the full post
Day 16: Rest Should Be Designed, Not Optional
Telling employees to “take care of themselves” isn’t enough if systems make rest difficult. Structured time off, built-in pauses, and intentional scheduling signal that well-being is truly valued.👉🏽 Read the full post
Day 17: Protect the Lunch Break
Lunch is recovery time. Respecting real breaks, offering nourishing food, and even supporting local Black-owned businesses are small choices that reflect larger cultural values.👉🏽 Read the full post
Recommended by LinkedIn
Day 18: Not Every Conversation Needs a Meeting
Respecting people’s time is a cultural decision. Meetings should create clarity, foster connection, or lead to decisions; otherwise, an email might do the job better.👉🏽 Read the full post
Day 19: Remote Work Can Reduce Harm
Remote work isn’t only about flexibility; for many Black employees, it can reduce exposure to bias and daily stressors. Before changing policies, leaders should examine whether the real challenge is presence… or leadership design.👉🏽 Read the full post
Day 20: Black Employees Shouldn’t Carry Black History Month
Inspired by Carter G. Woodson’s original vision, this reflection reminds organizations that honoring Black history requires year-round learning, not placing the planning, teaching, and emotional labor on Black staff.👉🏽 Read the full post
This week's patterns
Across these posts, one idea kept surfacing:
Support is about how work is structured.
From affinity spaces to rest, communication, and remote work policies, the question isn’t whether organizations care. It’s whether their systems actually show it.
If you haven’t read the individual reflections yet, this week’s recap is a great place to start — and I’d love to hear which topic resonated most with you.