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Intel highlights increasingly diverse workforce in annual report

Hack Harassment wasn’t an isolated incident: Intel Corp.’s initiative against online bullying was part of a $300 million effort started last year to make the world of tech a friendlier one – beginning with its own U.S. workforce, which it pledged would “reach full representation of women and underrepresented minorities” by 2020.

And in many ways the first year of the company’s initiative was a successful one, with Intel exceeding its goal of 40 per cent diversity among new employees by increasing the number of women hired by nearly 43 per cent, and the number of underrepresented minorities (that is, non-Asians) hired by 31 per cent, according to the company’s 2015 diversity and inclusion annual report released on Feb. 3.

But underneath each gain lies a more sobering reality: the 43 per cent increase in the number of women hired means that women represented 35 per cent of Intel’s new employees in 2015; the 31 per cent increase in hiring underrepresented minorities means they represented 11.8 per cent of Intel’s new employees in 2015; and the company’s overall U.S. workforce remains 53.3 per cent white (and 32.8 per cent Asian) and 75.2 per cent male.

The racial and gender breakdown of Intel’s current U.S. workforce. Source: Intel

Acknowledging the problem

To reach its goal of full gender and ethnic parity with the U.S. workforce (below) by 2020, Intel is dividing its efforts into five key programs and initiatives:

  1. Focused hiring and retention programs;
  2. Partnerships with schools, colleges, and universities to increase the diversity of talent available to the industry at large;
  3. Investment in diverse entrepreneurs and developers behind emerging technologies, also to increase the industry’s diversity of talent;
  4. Support for women in gaming and other online communities to retain their interest in the overall industry;
  5. A commitment to transparency by publishing its results every year. “It keeps us accountable and we hope it encourages others to be equally transparent,” the report says.
Representation in the U.S. workforce of several minority groups (blue), which Intel has planned to achieve parity with by 2020. Source: Intel

Implementing the solution

To achieve its goals, the company has taken several notable steps:

To be fair to Intel, there are many entrenched reasons for the tech industry’s lack of diversity, and they cannot be changed overnight, a fact the company acknowledges in the report by focusing on where its efforts missed the mark.

“While we’re gratified that our pioneering efforts have shaken up the company – and the industry at large – we’re focused on the progress that remains,” the report said.

In particular, the company admitted to falling short of its hiring goals for underrepresented minorities, and its retention rate for African-Americans. For 2016, it has committed to 45 per cent of new hires in the U.S. being from diverse backgrounds, with a sub-goal of 14 per cent being underrepresented minorities.

“In short, we’ve only just begun,” the report said. “And we’re excited to drive further improvements and impact in 2016.”

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