- 9 percent of industry workers are black or Latino
- 88 percent of IT patents were created by male-only teams
- 1 percent of VC-backed startups are led by African-Americans
Tech Firms Sign Pledge to Boost Diversity
Dozens of technology companies are telling the White House that they’ll make their respective workforces more diverse. The Tech Inclusion Pledge, released on the eve of the President’s Global Entrepreneurship Summit (GES) at Stanford, proposes concrete steps for achieving that diversity. It has been framed as an industry-led effort, rather than government-driven, despite heavy promotion from the executive branch. “We will treat this goal as a top management priority and business imperative,” read a letter addressed to the White House and signed by over 30 tech companies, “because tapping the full measure of talent from across the country is critical for the long-term success of both our individual companies and the nation as a whole.” Tech firms signing the measure include Airbnb, GitHub, Intel, SAP, and Spotify. According to the letter, they’ll boost diversity by investing in partnerships “to build a diverse pipeline of technology talent,” publish annual reports on the diversity of their respective workforces, and implement “company-specific goals to recruit, retain, and advance diverse technology talent.” A separate Website set up for the Pledge offers a handful of stats about diversity within the tech industry: