When CHROs and other HR leaders engage with the wider community, they don’t just make the world a better place. They develop critical skills that enhance their leadership potential and help them elevate their organizations. Involvement in community issues helps cultivate the key attributes that define well-rounded, high-impact leaders who drive change within their organizations.
This kind of outreach can take many forms, including local government service or volunteering with nonprofits, as well as private-sector communities, such as business coalitions. This kind of work allows executives to create a symbiotic relationship with their communities. The more civically engaged they become, the more effective their leadership becomes within their organizations.
“HR professionals engaged civically may gain a broader lens on people’s lived experiences, stories behind data, and the forces that shape workplace dynamics,” said Laurent Grosvenor, chief diversity officer at the University of Washington’s Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation. “It sharpens your ability to build policies that aren’t just compliant, but compassionate. It creates feedback loops between the world outside and the world within the organization.”
How Civic Engagement Strengthens Leadership Skills
Civic engagement and leadership share fundamental skills, making participation in civic activities a powerful way to strengthen those same capabilities within an organization. This kind of work allows leaders to practice building consensus, developing strategy, and communicating a vision.
Enhanced Consensus-Building
Disagreements can be a powerful drain on a business, particularly when they escalate. Acts of incivility cost U.S. employers more than $2 billion a day in reduced productivity and absenteeism, according to the SHRM Q1 2025 Civility Index. But those conflicts aren’t just limited to the employee breakroom — they can turn up in the boardroom too, particularly when leaders are working across departments on cross-functional projects.
Some common sources of conflict include:
- Resource constraints. Differing budget priorities between teams can create tension when prioritizing HR-led initiatives.
- Clashing views. Misaligned perspectives can lead to conflict and slow decision-making.
- Siloed data systems. Limited access to integrated data across departments can hinder informed decision-making and strategic alignment.
Civic engagement gives leaders a chance to encounter these challenges in a new space, away from the pressures of their organization. This allows them to sharpen their emotional intelligence by practicing respectful dialogue and active listening during moments of tense disagreements.
“By participating in civic activities, CHROs are exposed to different backgrounds and perspectives, which promotes empathy, acceptance, and trust,” said Jinah Chernivec, SHRM-SCP, chief human resources and risk officer at Goodwill-Easter Seals Minnesota. “Civic work has significantly improved my ability to listen actively, seek common ground, and remain solutions-focused, which are essential skills for effective conflict resolution and building team trust.”
Civic engagement offers a real-world training ground for leaders to strengthen their ability to lead through conflict, ultimately helping organizations reduce costly disputes and boost productivity.
Better Insights-Driven Strategic Thinking
Civic engagement is a people-focused endeavor that provides leaders with valuable insights into the evolving needs of a diverse and modern workforce.
For example, firsthand civic activities, such as participating in workforce development coalitions, can help leaders build competitive compensation packages that address not only internal organizational factors but also external pressures, such as inflation and job market volatility.
Through active civic involvement, HR leaders gain a deeper understanding of what job seekers and employees truly value in their local communities. Whether it’s affordable child care, mental health support, or other essential services, the firsthand interpersonal exposure that happens through civic engagement enables CHROs and other HR leaders to design more responsive, people-centered benefit packages that meet the evolving needs of a multi-generational workforce. These insights into worker needs can lead to benefits policies that enhance worker retention.
Enhanced Inclusive Communication Skills
Knowing how to communicate effectively with a diverse group is critical to seeing the benefits of inclusion. Civic engagement, particularly within underrepresented communities, can help leaders develop stronger inclusive communication skills by exposing them to the unique needs of individuals from diverse cultural backgrounds, education levels, and lived experiences.
“Civic engagement has taught me to lead with listening, prioritize people, and to remain grounded in the everyday needs of those whose voices are often excluded or who differ from me in ideology and practice,” said Grosvenor.
Exposure to diverse environments enhances inclusive communication skills in leaders, developing the following attributes:
- Cultural sensitivity and awareness. Leaders become more attuned to respectful, inclusive dialogue when engaging with teams from varied cultural backgrounds.
- Empathy. This is the crucial ability to communicate during challenging organizational shifts with a deep understanding of individual needs, emotions, and perspectives.
- Accessibility. Whether written (e.g., closed captions) or verbal, communication is delivered in ways that consider varying literacy levels and ensure it’s understandable and usable by all members within an organization.
Step into the Community, Lead with Purpose
Civic engagement gives CHROs and other HR leaders a broader perspective and equips them to drive change within their organizations. It’s essential to approach civic engagement with a top-to-bottom funnel approach. Promote civic-minded policies in the workplace to your teams and tie them into employer branding and engagement strategies to create a work culture that seeks connection, meaning, and impact.
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