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Blended

Blended

By: Sarah Barnes-Humphrey
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Welcome to Blended – the podcast where transformative conversations spark real change. Imagine the raw honesty of a Red Table Talk, but with a laser focus on the critical conversations around inclusion in the workplace. Each episode brings together five individuals from vastly different walks of life, creating a vibrant space where unique perspectives collide, and meaningful dialogue takes center stage. We tackle the topics others shy away from, addressing the uncomfortable, the overlooked, and the necessary with authenticity and courage. If you're ready to challenge your assumptions, embrace new perspectives, and gain actionable insights into creating truly inclusive environments, this is the podcast you can't afford to miss. Let's lean in, listen, and grow together. Economics Social Sciences
Episodes
  • 66 - Intersectionality: the next frontier for inclusive workplaces
    Apr 22 2026

    Welcome back to Blended!

    Today, we're talking about intersectionality.

    This is something that comes up a lot as part of our conversations here on Blended. But often it's when we're really exploring personal identities and sharing our experiences. And, the more we dive into the workplace, the more the nuance of intersectionality tends to disappear. There's an ERG for this type of person, a policy for that type – but what if you're both? When it comes to understanding the complexity of human identity, corporate is still lagging behind.

    But, in a climate where DEI is being eroded altogether, how can businesses put a focus on intersectionality – and why is it actually important?

    IN THIS EPISODE:

    [00.59] Introductions to our Blended panelists.

    · Jodi – Founder and CEO at NIARA Consulting

    · Marjorie – Director of Community at Exos, Founder and Principal Strategist at Community by Association, and podcast host

    · Eileen – Founder and CEO at Apex Tide Consulting

    · Dr Dequies – Founder and CEO at We Suite Women's Empowerment Consulting and Associate/Adjunct Faculty in organizational development and leadership

    "I'm black and biracial so I've always lived between two identities… I live this topic every day and I see how it has, and has not, changed across cultures and communities." Jodi

    [12.51] The group share their personal experiences and examine what intersectionality means to them.

    "Intersectionality is every identity that you carry, and it doesn't always look like a textbook definition. As a person in academia, I can say a lot about what the research may say. But, for me, it's not just my gender, race or sexuality… Everything plays a role in how I show up." Dr Dequies

    "It's also your life experiences and how you've had to navigate the world. Intersectionality includes all of the challenges you've had to overcome, the successes you've seen, the experiences you've gained… It's a rich ecosystem." Marjorie

    • Identity
    • Personal values/ethics
    • Layered approach
    • Life experiences/how you've navigated the world
    • Personal challenges and successes
    • Asking questions
    • Having deeper conversations
    • Code switching
    • Culture
    • Socio economics
    • Expectations
    • Safety
    • Subjective
    • Diversity
    • Judgement
    • Labels

    "It's the reality that we don't experience identity in siloes. We experience it all at once... So when organizations try to simplify identity into neat categories for ERGs, where do you go?" Jodi

    "The best visual is the iceberg. So much of a human is below the waterline, but we only see a little bit… We fall into the trap of judging people by that bit… And if we look at humans through only one lens, we miss the truth of their experience." Eileen

    [32.03] The panel discuss how intersectionality interacts with bias, personally and professionally.

    "Ambiguity doesn't remove bias. It creates another form of it." Jodi

    • Cultural norms
    • Relatability
    • Assumptions/perception
    • External similarities do not necessarily equal shared experiences
    • Projection
    • Ambiguity
    • Bias in AI
    • Triggers
    • Conscious/unconscious
    • Weaponized incompetence
    • Accountability
    • Upbringing – how do you break the cycle?
    • Choice

    "Bias isn't just interpersonal. It can be structural, organizational, or technological… If our systems aren't designed with intersectionality in mind, they can replicate or amplify old inequities – but at a larger scale." Eileen

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    1 hr and 34 mins
  • 65 – Fighting Stigma: Overcoming Stereotypes in the Workplace
    Feb 19 2026
    Welcome back to Blended! Today, we're taking on a big topic – stigma and stereotypes. As laws and recommendations continue to evolve at both federal and state levels, employers face an increasingly complex landscape. According to reports, some of the top challenges for employers in 2026 range from navigating compliance and whistleblowing, to dealing with issues around immigration and mental health and wellbeing. But, below all of this complexity, many employees find themselves dealing with versions of the same old problems. Stereotypes, stigma, and bias are still felt deeply by women, people of color, the LGBTQIA+ and disability communities, and more. So, whilst the big battles are happening at federal and state level, what can the rest of us do to address what it all means for employees on a day-to-day basis? Our guests are going to be diving into all of that today, and exploring addressing stigma and overcoming stereotypes in your organization. IN THIS EPISODE: [01.12] Introductions to our Blended panelists. · Jenny – Chief Executive Officer at Catalais Consulting · Tedi – President and CEO at MI Diversity Center · Robbin – Founder and CEO at Women Igniting Change [04.58] The group share their personal experiences, and discuss what stereotypes and stigma really mean, how they show up in the workplace, and their impacts. · Gender-based stereotypes, eg. Emotion or working mothers · Credibility · Belonging · Negative perceptions · Unfounded truths · Assumptions · Judgement · Blame · Inherited beliefs and values · Influence of family, society and culture · Identity · Language – words have power · Dehumanization · Lived experience · Fear/self-protection · Privilege · Jenny's experience of immigration and assimilation · Limiting potential · Racism · Top down examples/leadership · Sources of information/disinformation · Asking questions · Doing due diligence · Control · Us vs them narrative · Challenges of multigenerational workplaces · Right and wrong, true and false · Physical and mental impact · Intersectionality · Active listening · Robbin's experience of reverse agism and stereotyping around her personality type · Misogyny · Tedi's experience of identity stereotyping · Bias – implicit and explicit, conscious and unconscious · Stereotyping and labels within individual communities "Someone who expresses passion and empathy in the workplace is often framed as too emotional, rather than that being seen as a leadership strength. To me, that's a stereotype… The stigma is when we start to internalize that." Robbin "There's no such thing as a true stereotype!" Tedi "Stereotypes are assumptions, shortcuts we take to understand others quickly. Stigma is what happens when those assumptions get loaded with judgement or consequence." Jenny "Our own unexamined beliefs and values tend to ooze out onto other people, either intentionally or unintentionally." Robbin "Privilege is not the issue – what we do with it is... Blind spots are the not issue – refusing to look at them, acknowledge them, and then learn and grow from them IS." Jenny [55.39] The panel explore how to tackle issues around stereotyping and stigma in the workplace. · DEI mapping/auditing · Examining attitudes of leadership team and employees · Examining policies and practices · Tracking, meeting and celebrating goals/milestones · Awareness · Responsibility · Communication · Safety/culture · Authenticity · Separation between work self and personal self · Accountability · Respect · Equality · Impact of current political climate · Transparency · Vulnerability · Value systems "It takes culture to create a safe container for those conversations. When I was in corporate, part of the management style was fear and intimidation. There was no way it was safe enough to have this kind of dialogue." Robbin "It comes down to our core values. If our core values, as human beings, are aligned, it's OK if we have different beliefs. As long as those ...
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    1 hr and 19 mins
  • 64 - Diverse Voices on Industry Stages
    Jan 14 2026
    Seek, create, mentor, partner – the four steps to getting diverse voices onto industry stages Welcome back to Blended! Today, we're talking about the ethos behind this podcast – highlighting diverse voices. The Blended podcast was founded to give people from all walks of life a platform and, as an extension of that, the Blended Pledge was established to get those people onto industry stages. Because we've all been at conferences and events and seen the same type of person represented time and again. We've heard that diverse voices weren't invited or, if they were, they couldn't afford to fund the trip. Across industries, we're starting to see panels and stages work on that diversity, but progress isn't happening quickly enough. So, as we look towards a brand new year, we wanted to share some practical advice around what we can all do to get more diverse voices onto industry stages – and why it matters. IN THIS EPISODE: [01.04] Introductions to our Blended panelists. Karen – President and CEO at World Trade Center Denver Megan – Psychotherapist and host of Career Congregation podcast Mary – Senior Vice President of Business Development at Pallet Alliance [06.07] The group discuss what they see when it comes to diverse voices on industry stages, how inclusion has changed, and their experiences as speakers, organizers and attendees. Male representation on stage Different perspectives lead to better outcomes Small changes Slow pace Why should companies care? Diversity of country of origin Diversity of audience as well as panel Megan's experience of shifting gender representation in psychology, therapy, and wellness, as well as different representations across cultures (west vs east) "I've been going to conferences a long time and I do see a shift in the diversity that's on stages. But I'm still very familiar with the basics: Caucasian, male, business." Mary "Like attracts like, even though diversity matters. If you're trying to get a diverse audience, you need to have those people on the panel… I build a panel based on who I want in the audience." Karen [24.18] The panel explore common barriers and challenges to achieving more diversity and inclusion at industry events. Women rejecting opportunity/suggesting male colleagues Making mistakes Event planning Honesty Panel planning is an art, not a science Responsibility – individual and business Karen's experience of a speaker tying her personal talent for fire-eating to managing supply chain Inspiration Mary's experience of being a masculine-presenting lesbian and being treated differently Lack of exposure Being different is a superpower Courage Seeing to believe Corporate gatekeeping – who can represent the company? Travel – Expenses Getting creative Permission Company vs personal brand Calling people out Bias Leadership Fear Neurodivergence – creating diverse experiences different ways of learning/working "A lot of companies are afraid to talk right now, there's a fear of retribution, they don't want to get out in front on some of their challenges. But if you're vulnerable and talk about the mistakes you've made, you seem more powerful. And that's what people learn from." Karen "I'm a masculine-presenting lesbian… Who I am and how I present is NOT represented anywhere. I'm different, but that's been working for me... And I encourage people that are like me to be proud of who they are by sharing my story." Mary "These big decisions usually boil down to one person. They've been around for a long time, they're resistant to change and don't like the way things are going… These old white male headspaces need to shift." Megan [01.11.26] The group share some practical tips and advice for getting more diverse voices onto stages. Intent Research Goal-setting Calls for speakers Understanding/supporting the people you have in your company Upskilling Identifying strengths Personal ethos/mission/values Authenticity "Diversity is way beyond color of skin." Karen [01.25.33] The panel sum up their thoughts from today's discussion. RESOURCES AND LINKS MENTIONED: You can connect with Karen, Megan or Mary over on LinkedIn.
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    1 hr and 32 mins
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