twitter committed itself Friday to boost the share of female employees
from 34% to 35% by next year. In a global workforce of 4,100, that’s 41
more women.
Underrepresented ethnic groups -- mostly, blacks and
Latinos -- make up 8% of its U.S. workforce. It wants to boost that
figure to 9%.
If those numbers seem oddly specific and low, that’s
because increasing employee diversity has been an ongoing struggle for
tech companies, and saying it out loud – or, in Twitter’s case,
publishing its diversity goals online for all to see – doesn’t
necessarily make it easier.
But setting goals is a start, diversity experts say.
“Last
year there was a trend to release [diversity] data, which was great,”
said Melinda Epler, the founder of Change Catalyst, a platform that
supports women entrepreneurs. “Setting goals is a next step in the right
direction.”
Many diversity experts agree goal-setting clearly
sends the message that companies are are serious about diversity. But,
like Epler, they can’t shake the modesty of the numbers.
In
addition to lifting its overall female workforce by 1%, Twitter said it
plans to boost women in technical jobs from 13% to 16%.
As for other underrepresented groups in its overall workforce, it plans to boost that number from 8% to 9%.
“That’s disappointing,” Epler said.
But it’s also illustrative of the challenge large companies face in changing the ratio.
“I
bet you they’re benchmarking to two things,” said Silicon Valley angel
investor and chief executive of photo editing service PicMonkey.com,
Jonathan Sposato. “They’re probably benchmarking to their peers, like
Facebook and Google, and they’re benchmarking to existing numbers,” he
said.
"The numbers are probably not more aggressive because they’re currently really bad.”
It’s
unclear exactly how Twitter will go about meeting even its modest
goals. It could hire more women as it expands its workforce.
Technically, though, it could lay off mostly white men if the company
trims back its workforce, and meet its diversity goals without hiring
anyone. Some investors are complaining that Twitter needs more cost
control, and layoffs are conceivable. Twitter declined to discuss the
subject.
Numerically, it’s a tough problem, Sposato said.
For
smaller companies, it’s easier to move the needle, because bringing on
one or two new hires could radically shift the workforce gender ratio.
But at firms such as Twitter, which has 4,100employees, or Facebook,
which has around 10,000 employees (32% female, 9% underrepresented
ethnic groups in the U.S.), or even Google, which has more than 50,000
employees (30% women, 9% underrepresented ethnic groups) it could take
hundreds of hires before an incremental percentage change appears.
And
while ambition is important – Pinterest, for example, has explicitly
stated it wants to increase its female engineering workforce from the
current 21% to 30% – recruitment experts warn against setting
“unhealthy” goals.
Rather than set hiring quotas, chief executive
of recruitment platform Entelo, Jon Bischke, said companies should focus
on creating diverse pipelines from which to hire, and then hire the
best person from that pool.
“If you have a situation where your
pipelines are not diverse, yet you’re trying to achieve a diversity goal
hiring-wise, then you end up with situations where companies hire
people primarily because they’re female, and that can be toxic to a
company’s culture,” Bischke said.
In his experience, when companies diversify their hiring pools, they generally end up with diverse teams.
While
critics of Twitter’s and Pinterest’s hiring goals may be quick to draw a
comparison with various affirmative action initiatives that have in the
past resulted in backlash and accusations of reverse discrimination,
some diversity experts say it’s not a fair comparison.
“Right now,
people are hired because of their gender and race due to unconscious
biases, so we have to do corrections when it comes to that,” Epler said.
“I’m much less worried about the backlash. People need to get over
that. For so long it’s been biased in the wrong direction.”
Sposato
also believes this is less about favoring people of a certain gender or
ethnic background, and more about correcting a course that has long
favored white and Asian men.
“I’m absolutely confused when people
say there’s a pipeline problem or a lack of qualified [female]
candidates, because what they really mean is they feel a qualified
candidate looks, walks and talks like a man,” Sposato said. “That’s the
problem.”
Since disclosing their diversity numbers last year,
companies such as Apple and Facebook have reported a modest increase in
the diversity of their workforce. Pinterest was able to increase its
female engineering workforce from 40% to 42%. A year from now, Twitter
hopes to be able to report similar, incremental improvements.
But,
as Epler said, this is only a start. And while the various diversity
programs and initiatives are commendable, the next step is going to be
changing company cultures and values so once people from
underrepresented groups are hired, they stay.
But that will probably require a different set of goals altogether.
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