In the aftermath of the George Floyd insurrection, the call went out across America. Diversity uber alles, was the battle cry. Companies joined the movement and hired more diversity, equity and inclusion officers. They wanted to have a workforce that looked like America. The Financial Times has the story.
Companies pledged billions of dollars in 2020 to support black workers and communities. They also rushed to recruit diversity professionals: hiring of chief diversity officers jumped 169 per cent between 2019 and 2022, according to jobs-focused social network LinkedIn, making this the fastest-growing executive role in US companies.
Cynics did not really believe it. They thought that the companies were simply engaging in good corporate public relations. They expected that the diversity officers who were hired at the height of the George Floyd insurrection would not be on the job for a very long time.
So now, as though someone rang a bell, a number of diversity executives are leaving their jobs. This has especially impacted the entertainment industry.
The exits of several high-profile US diversity executives are fuelling fears over corporate America’s commitment to racial equity in the face of tougher economic and political conditions.
Diversity and inclusion leaders at Disney, Netflix, Warner Bros Discovery and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences have resigned or been let go in recent weeks.
The companies are not replacing the officers they are letting go. Apparently, the jobs were not really jobs, but were designed to make the companies look good-- to prevent lawsuits and to ensure that the media did not attack them for not being sufficiently diverse.
Consider this:
Disney, which has faced sustained pressure from conservatives over its diversity initiatives, announced in June that Latondra Newton would be leaving “to pursue other endeavours”. Netflix’s head of inclusion strategy, Vernā Myers, said she would step down in September to run her own consulting business while still advising the streaming group.
Asif Sadiq, chief global DEI officer at Warner Bros Discovery, told staff on June 30 that Karen Horne, the studio’s top diversity executive in North America, would leave as a part of a broader restructuring. Similar roles at technology companies including Twitter have been cut as part of wider industry job cuts over the past year.
It is not just the entertainment business:
Beyond the entertainment industry, evidence is mounting that business is curtailing investment in inclusion initiatives three years after George Floyd’s murder put pressure on companies to do more to address racial inequities.
Truth be told, companies are in the business of making a profit. If they discover that diversity and equity do not contribute to the bottom line, they are likely to correct.
The new policy on diversity hiring has not been limited to the entertainment business.
That trend has reversed over the past year. Hiring of diversity officers fell 4.51 per cent, even as recruiting for other executive roles grew, LinkedIn found.
The number of new diversity, equity and inclusion positions at North American companies has also contracted since peaking in 2021, according to Revelio Labs, which tracks workplace trends.
DEI officers have been buffeted by economic conditions that have triggered lay-offs and by political controversies, said Alina Polonskaia, a diversity consultant at Korn Ferry.
Does this mean that the party is over? It suggests as much. And yet, given the sensitivity of the issue, companies will continue to keep up appearances, all the while working to sustain the bottom line.
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I really with the press would stop calling Floyd's death murder. He overdosed, pure and simple.
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