On The Level is an opportunity for LPFI staff and guest bloggers to engage in conversations with you! Please join us as we explore the many issues of diversity, equity, fairness and bias from classrooms to boardrooms.
Join the #HiddenBiasIT Discussion on Twitter
Do tech companies put enough effort into diversity? Apparently not, says, The Tilted Playing Field, our latest report, released today. Here’s what we found:
(1) IT workplace experiences vary significantly by race and gender...
- Women and underrepresented people of color encounter negative workplace experiences (e.g, difficulty balancing work/family, exclusionary cliques, bullying) at rates significantly higher than their male and white counterparts.
- Being a woman and/or underrepresented person of color predicted the likelihood of experiencing negative workplace incidents.
(2) Negative workplace experiences lead to increased turnover in IT roles.
- Underrepresented people of color were least satisfied with their job, least satisfied with skill development opportunities, and most likely to leave the company in the upcoming year.
- As the number of negative work experiences reported by individuals across the study increased, the level of satisfaction with their current job and likelihood to remain with that company significantly decreased.
(3) Diversity is not a priority for gatekeepers, despite a talent shortage and high cost of employee turnover.
- Despite vast underrepresentation of women and people of color in IT, 68% of the sample indicated satisfaction with their company’s diversity efforts.
- However, men and women in startups differed drastically in their satisfaction with their company’s diversity efforts. And underrepresented people of color were nearly twice as likely as whites to be in favor of a company-wide practice to increase diversity (80% compared to 46%).
What has your own company done to increase diversity? Do you think the efforts are enough? What have you experienced? Join the conversation on Twitter by using hashtag #HiddenBiasIT. We’ll see you there!
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