Pride Month has a way of bringing certain conversations to the surface, conversations about identity, belonging, and what it actually means to build an LGBTQ+ inclusive workplace. And while these conversations matter beyond June, this is as good a time as any to sit with them honestly.
This isn’t about getting everything right. It’s about being willing to learn, stumble a little, and keep going anyway, especially if you’re a manager, because your team feels your example more than they read any policy.
Why workplace policy alone doesn't create inclusion
Most organisations today have something written down: an anti-discrimination clause, a commitment to LGBTQIA+ workplace inclusion, sometimes even further, gender-neutral restrooms, transition support guidelines, pronoun fields in HR systems. All of that matters. And yet, the gap between what’s in a policy document and what someone actually experiences at work is almost always a human gap. A manager gap.
Your team members don’t experience your organisation’s inclusion stance as a PDF. They experience it in how you respond when someone shares something personal. In whether you address the joke that shouldn’t have landed, or let it pass. In whether they feel they can bring their full selves to work without bracing for a reaction.
Inclusion isn’t written. It’s enacted, every day, in ordinary moments.
Using correct pronouns at work: why it matters more than you think
There’s often more anxiety around pronouns in the workplace than there needs to be. And underneath that anxiety is usually a worry about getting it wrong.
Here’s the thing: getting it wrong and correcting yourself is far less harmful than not trying at all, or treating the conversation as too uncomfortable to have.
When someone shares their pronouns, they’re extending trust. They’re telling you something about how they move through the world and asking you to meet them there. That’s not a political act. It’s a human one.
The most useful thing a manager can do isn’t to make a big moment of it, it’s to make it unremarkable.
- Introduce yourself with your own pronouns, so it becomes a team norm rather than an individual burden
- If you make a mistake, correct it briefly and move on, apologies tend to centre the wrong person
- When unsure, ask quietly and respectfully, rather than guessing or avoiding the person altogether
Confidentiality: the non-negotiable part of LGBTQ+ allyship
If someone comes out to you, that story is theirs to tell. Not yours to share with HR “just so they know,” not yours to mention to their colleagues with good intentions, not yours to bring up because you thought it would help.
Outing someone, even accidentally, even kindly, can cause harm that’s difficult to undo. The trust it breaks is hard to rebuild.
The rule is simple: if they told you, they decide what happens next.
Building a workplace culture of belonging beyond Pride Month
The organisations that genuinely get LGBTQ+ inclusion right aren’t always the loudest in June. They’re the ones where queer employees don’t spend the rest of the year wondering whether they’re actually welcome, or just tolerated during awareness months.
This Pride Month, the most meaningful question a manager can sit with isn’t “what should we do for Pride?”
It’s: do the people on my team feel as safe, as seen, and as included in November as they do right now? And if not, what am I actually willing to do about it?
You don’t need all the answers. But you do need to create space for the questions to be asked.
At Breath Beings, we work with organisations and their managers to build inclusion that outlasts any awareness month. If you’d like to explore what that looks like for your team, we’d love to hear from you.