While the majority of frontline operators in the garment industry are women, their supervisors are typically men. This disparity, coupled with inequitable social contexts and intense production pressures, manifests in the form of conflicts on the factory floor which often go unreported. While individual and collective outlets for voicing grievances exist, many labor-intensive industries lack a smooth facilitation of direct communication between workers and administration. Considering the urgent need for a safe worker voice tool in their factories, we developed a two-way communication technology. Inache is our homegrown anonymous tool designed based on our rigorous research.
How can workers report their grievances and suggestions in a safe and trusted way? Does a particular medium of communication work better than another? How can we generate buy-in from all stakeholders on the factory floor?
We first mapped the macro environment of a factory setting, including all the stakeholders a worker interacts with. Our exercise was to capture a worker’s “universe” which includes supervisors, doctors, guards, hostel wardens, and management, and their relationship with each. We also evaluated existing mechanisms a worker has access to for using their voice. Our research also investigated workers’ micro environment using qualitative research methods. We learnt that workers lack trust in redressal and fear possible reprisal. Inache is a low technology solution created in response to this need for transparency and accountability between workers and firm administration.
Through Inache:
Inache is currently being evaluated across 40 factories.
Visit the GBL Ventures Website to know more about Inache.