Inclusion, Inc.. Sara Sanford
not surprising that investors are following consumers. In 2014, Google released its first workforce diversity report, pressuring other companies to do the same. As more and more businesses followed Google's lead and released their own reports, researchers had a chance to answer a long-debated question: Do investors actually care if a company is diverse?
Margaret Neale, an organizational psychology professor at Stanford's School of Business, studied shareholder reactions to nearly 60 diversity announcements made by publicly traded firms between 2014 and 2018. The study was largely comprised of firms from the financial and tech sectors, including companies such as JPMorgan, BlackRock, eBay, and Facebook. The researchers measured each firm's stock returns on the day of their diversity announcements and found that stock prices increased more when higher levels of diversity were reported. In the tech sector specifically, investor support was even more positive when diversity numbers were higher than Google's.
When companies delivered reports in subsequent years that did not show any increase in diversity numbers, stock prices did not rise.
“This goes beyond saying diversity is a good idea because it's ethical,” Neale noted. “Shareholders are saying, ‘If you're not as diverse as we want you to be, there are going to be economic consequences.'”11
Investors are demanding more than just diverse representation. They're pushing companies to eradicate inequitable policies. Nia Impact Capital is one of many investor funds leading the charge by challenging Tesla to end its use of mandatory arbitration. Forced arbitration came under fire when the #MeToo and Black Lives Matter movements exposed how it's often used as a tool to stifle harassment and discrimination complaints. The Nia fund brought a proposal to the floor of Tesla's annual shareholder meeting, asking the electric car maker to prepare a report on its use of employee arbitration.12 When Tesla's board pushed back, several other institutional shareholders, including Calvert Research & Management, and proxy advisors Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. and Glass Lewis, stepped up to voice their support of the proposal.
Nia has also leveraged its assets to achieve progress elsewhere. In a celebrated decision, IBM accepted a Nia-led proposal to increase transparency around the company's workplace practices and report publicly on the effectiveness of its diversity, equity, and inclusion programs. The fund also succeeded in advocating for cybersecurity giant Fortinet to compile and release annual diversity reports.
Nia is just one example of the kinds of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) funds that are pushing businesses to evolve. Investments in ESG funds doubled in 2020, accounting for 25 percent of US stock and bond mutual funds, a huge leap from the one percent share they held in 2014.13 Younger investors appear to be driving this shift, and their accumulating wealth will continue to follow companies that go beyond talk to meaningful action.
This undeniable demand, unfortunately, hasn't translated into impact. Reviewing GEN's national survey data, only 22 percent of employees believe that their employer has publicly stated DEI as a priority and has a clear roadmap for getting there. A 2020 study surveying over 800 HR professionals demonstrated similar findings: 76 percent of companies have no diversity or inclusion goals.14
As the workforce has changed, most companies' approaches still haven't, and this comes at a great cost.
Invoicing Exclusion: The High Cost of Underestimating Employees
Exclusion carries an amorphous price tag. At best, we can itemize pieces of it. For example, the EEOC estimates it collects $120 million a year in relation to harassment charges, in pre-litigation processes alone. The average harassment claim settled outside of court will typically run an organization between $75,000 and $125,000,15 and lawsuits resulting from age discrimination have cost companies collectively as much as $250 million.16 These figures don't include the cases settled privately or the enduring costs of damaged reputations and tarnished brands.
Organizations also lose millions each year to diversity turnover. For example, in technology-related industries, women are twice as likely to leave as men, and Black and Latino workers are 3.5 times more likely to quit than their white or Asian colleagues.17 Underestimated employees cite “culture” as their top reason for resigning, and businesses pay an annual $16 billion diversity attrition tab.
The full expenses of exclusion extend far beyond litigation and attrition, though. Our most costly mistakes are the ones we're convinced we're not making.
The Myth of Meritocracy
In its early days, tech was seen as a triumphant return to merit-based competition. Unlike their counterparts on Wall Street or in law firms, tech entrepreneurs didn't have to “know someone” to get ahead. A guy with a garage and enough entrepreneurial spirit and grit could bootstrap his own success. The “wild west” of Silicon Valley was rumored to be a new land of equal opportunity, where a competitive work ethic and superior code would determine who rose to the top.
Today on this supposedly level playing field, women represent only about 11 percent of developers.18 The computer science departments at California Polytechnic and North Carolina State University wanted to understand why. Do women underperform their male peers that badly? Does the sector need to do a better job of marketing to women? Is it just a pipeline problem?
A deep dive into GitHub revealed some answers.19 This 12-million-person open-source coding community allows members to make and respond to public requests for code for programming projects. This massive exchange provided the opportunity for researchers to observe how gender played a role in coding interactions. They found that code written by women was approved at a higher rate than code written by men. Women's coding acceptance rates dominated men's in the top ten programming languages.
There was one important catch: This trend only applied if women kept their gender a secret.
When female developers publicly displayed their gender, their code acceptance rate was lower than men's. While women may have been producing more competent code than men, their contributions were less likely to be accepted if their gender was known.
Even when we believe we've created objective digital meritocracies, bias left unchecked sabotages our access to excellence.
The Best Person for the Job
“I don't hire for diversity. I just hire the best person for the job.”
I hear this “best person for the job” objection to diversity initiatives most often in fields that tend to think of themselves as meritocracies. The tech industry isn't alone in its perception of itself as meritocratic, but it does give us a good example of how this belief plays out.
In a (since deleted) article in Forbes, tech industry commentator Brian S. Hall declared, “If you aren't able to make it here [Silicon Valley], it's almost certainly not because of any bias.” Anyone claiming bias, he argued, should blame their own “refusal to put in the hard work.”20
It appears that bias may play a bigger role than Hall realized. A 2012 randomized, double-blind study found that when hiring managers in STEM fields were given application materials