The Uncertain Future of Diversity and Hiring
November 30, 2023 –
Diversity has had it rough lately. First, there were cutbacks due to the economy and then came the Supreme Court’s ruling against affirmative action. That was followed by a cohort of Republican attorneys general issuing a letter to Fortune 100 CEOs questioning the legality of some DEI efforts. The main issue for the moment centers on quotas, a topic which was at the heart of the recent Supreme Court ruling banning affirmative action at universities, according to a recent report from Korn Ferry. Though the ruling doesn’t apply to the private sector, the attorneys general are raising questions.
For his part, Korn Ferry chief diversity officer JT Saunders says that no laws exist yet to address issues like this, but some form of legislation is likely down the road. “While quotas may have been useful as a safety net to encourage equitable opportunity, they are not the most effective instrument in the DEI toolkit,” he said. “If you’re only relying on quotas from a compliance-driven perspective, you’re likely not getting the best results from DEI. You’re creating an opportunity for it to be challenged quite easily. It can’t be about checking boxes. It must be about business outcomes.”
“Still, this latest wave of discontent directed at DEI is indeed worrying,” said Andrés Tapia, a senior client partner in Korn Ferry’s DE&I practice. “Especially given that firms’ enthusiasm has shown signs of waning.” At the end of 2022, the reported attrition rate for DEI professionals was 33 percent, compared to 21 percent for those in other roles. “Those who believe in inclusivity not to stay on the defensive but instead to bring the argument of diversity forward in a way that business can’t deny,” Mr. Tapia said. “These reactionary forces should be asked to make the argument against the innovation, marketplace growth, and talent optimization that comes from diversity. Let’s have that debate.”
Given that mandated quotas may have unclear implications, Mr. Tapia suggests that targets set by companies to achieve a level of diversity reflective of their consumer base should be seen instead
as a strategic aspiration. The 2020 census marked the first time America’s white population was in decline; it’s currently at 57 percent and projected to be less than 50 percent by 2045. This has a clear impact on company profits, say experts. Hispanic consumers, for example, comprise over 18 percent of the total U.S. population, according to the U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey. Indeed, Latinx people in the US would reportedly have the fifth-biggest GDP in the world if they were their own country. “Whether you like it or not, half of this country may be people not like you,” said Mr. Tapia. “Do you know how to sell, design, and do customer service to people not like you?”
“The consequences of getting diversity wrong can have a big impact on an organization,” said Alina Polonskaia, global leader of Korn Ferry’s DE&I consulting practice. “At the height of the pandemic, pulse oximeters were the main tool used to determine whether or not one’s blood-oxygen levels were healthy.”
However, one study by scientists at Johns Hopkins University found that inaccurate readings from pulse oximeters led to a failure to identify Black and Hispanic patients with low blood oxygen. Ms. Polonskaia wonders whether the reason the devices only worked on white patients was because the people who developed the technology were primarily white themselves – though this part isn’t known for sure. “What is known is that the pulse oximeter promised to effectively serve people without regard for their race,” she said. “But we now know that its promise was only fulfilled for white patients, not people with darker skin.”
DEI Efforts Decreasing?
According to a recent survey of more than 1,000 firms, leadership support for DEI initiatives has fallen by 18 percent in two years. Today, one-fifth of companies offer no diversity programming at
all. Some are actually being sued by activists to stop DEI efforts. At least 30 states are considering legislation to defund DEI measures in public institutions.
“DEI efforts need to be structural in nature. That involves multiple steps, including retooling job roles and requirements so they’re accessible to more people, continuously building teams whose members have diverse backgrounds, and holding managers accountable for finding and developing talent from underrepresented groups.”
Yet Korn Ferry says that inequality remains glaring in many organizations. For example, white men are 33 percent more likely than white women – and 300 percent more likely than Black men or women – to have a management role. In a slow-growth economy that’s now three summers removed from the murder of George Floyd, Korn Ferry notes that organizations are questioning whether DEI is worth the effort.
DEI experts acknowledge that critics have a point, to some degree: a lot of programs haven’t worked. Many organizations need to change their approach, the experts say; too many rely on awareness training and good intentions. “Diversity is a lot more complex,” said Mr. Tapia.
One reason that programs don’t work: Some training methods shame participants for feeling biases that are biologically innate, according to the Korn Ferry report. “Almost everyone shows a preference, explicit or otherwise, for someone who looks like them and has a similar background,” it said. “Unconscious-bias training is a good step, but if all it does is label people as racist, experts say, it’s being executed poorly.”
“To have a chance at sustainable success,” said Ms. Polonskaia. “DEI efforts need to be structural in nature. That involves multiple steps, including retooling job roles and requirements
so they’re accessible to more people, continuously building teams whose members have diverse backgrounds, and holding managers accountable for finding and developing talent from underrepresented groups. Running unconscious-bias training is easy, but transformations aren’t.”