What we have learned

This session emphasized that diversity, equity, inclusion, respect, and belonging (DEIRB) are not optional or peripheral initiatives—they are foundational to how modern organizations function, innovate, and compete. Speakers reinforced that DEI is ultimately about people: how individuals show up, how valued they feel, and whether they are empowered to contribute fully. When workplaces support varied identities and lived experiences, teams benefit from higher creativity, deeper collaboration, stronger morale, and improved overall performance.

A central theme was the importance of embedding inclusion into everyday business operations rather than treating it as a one-time program. Panelists shared practical strategies such as designing systems that reduce participation barriers, normalizing curiosity and respectful correction, and creating spaces where employees feel safe bringing their full selves to work. Allyship was framed as an active, ongoing practice—not a label—rooted in shared values, empathy, and intentional behaviors.

The business case for DEI was clearly articulated: diverse teams consistently outperform homogenous ones, innovate more effectively, and are better positioned to recruit and retain top talent. Organizations that neglect DEI face declining competitiveness, weaker pipelines, disengagement, and cultural stagnation.

The session also addressed the shifting legal landscape. While certain federal actions have introduced uncertainty, speakers stressed that organizations do not need to abandon inclusive practices. Instead, they can refine language, ensure policies are non-discriminatory, and align their approach with both legal frameworks and internal values. Many companies are successfully reframing DEI through concepts like belonging, access, employee experience, and engagement.

Supporting organizations across the lighting industry affirmed that diversity strengthens the profession by broadening perspective and preparing it for future challenges. The event closed with a shared commitment to sustained, collaborative work—recognizing that inclusive environments benefit individuals, businesses, and the industry as a whole.

Main Findings

This session explored how diversity, equity, inclusion, respect, and belonging directly strengthen organizations, driving creativity, performance, and long-term competitiveness across the lighting industry.

About the speakers

Speaker 1

Lya Shaffer Osborn

Speaker 2

Sara Schonour

Speaker 3

Brienne Willcock

Speaker 4

Edward Bartholomew

Speaker 5

Nate Shalev

Speaker 6

Ebony Ross

Speaker 7

Ron Jacobs

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