• Home
  • Subscribe
    • Staff
    • Comment Section
    • Submitting Articles and News Stories
  • Articles
  • News
  • Apologetics
    • By Month
    • By Author
    • Articles
    • News
  • Contact
Menu

Fulcrum7

3230 US Route 36
Piqua, OH 45356
937-773-8235
Publishing Articles & News items

Your Custom Text Here

Fulcrum7

  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • About
    • Staff
    • Comment Section
    • Submitting Articles and News Stories
  • Articles
  • News
  • Apologetics
  • Archives
    • By Month
    • By Author
    • Articles
    • News
  • Contact
44.5.png

Articles

The Rise And Fall of Diversity, Inclusion and Equity (DIE)

August 14, 2023 Fulcrum7 Staff

Diversity Inclusion and Equity officers

Two years ago chief diversity officers were some of the hottest hires into executive ranks. Now, they increasingly feel left out in the cold.

You might even call it the rise — and the stupendous fall — of the chief diversity officer.

Companies including Netflix, Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery and Anheuser-Busch have recently said that high-profile diversity, equity and inclusion executives will be leaving their jobs. Thousands of diversity-focused workers have been laid off since last year, and some companies are scaling back racial justice commitments.

Diversity, inclusion, equity and—or DIE/DEI—jobs were put in the crosshairs after many companies started re-examining their executive ranks during the tech sector’s shake out last fall.  Some chief diversity officers say their work is facing additional scrutiny since the Supreme Court struck down affirmative action in college admissions and companies brace for potential legal challenges. DIE work has also become a liability, often a smokescreen for reverse racism and critical race theory.

“There’s a combination of grief, being very tired, and being, in some cases, overwhelmed,” says Miriam Warren, chief diversity officer for Yelp, of the challenges facing executives in the field.

In interviews, current and former chief diversity officers said company executives at times didn’t want to change hiring or promotion processes, despite initially telling CDOs they were hired to improve the talent pipeline. The quick about-face shows company enthusiasm for diversity initiatives hasn’t always proved durable, leaving some diversity officers now questioning their career path. 

In the wake of George Floyd’s demise in police custody in May 2020, companies scrambled to hire chief diversity officers, changing the face of the C-suite. In 2018, less than half of the companies in the S&P 500 employed someone in the role, and by 2022 three out four companies had created a position, according to a study from Russell Reynolds, an executive search firm. 

Once mostly tasked with HR matters, today’s diversity kommisars are expected to weigh in on new product development, marketing efforts and current events that relate to CRT, wokeness and equity. Warren and other CDOs said the expanded remit is playing out in a politically charged environment where corporate diversity efforts are the subject of frequent social-media firestorms. 

Falling Demand

New analysis from employment data provider Live Data Technologies shows that chief diversity officers have been more vulnerable to layoffs than their human resources counterparts, experiencing 40% higher turnover. Many people are now planning to pivot out of DEI work.

The number of CDO searches is down 75% in the past year, says Jason Hanold, chief executive of Hanold Associates Executive Search, which works with Fortune 100 companies to recruit HR and DEI executives, among other roles. Demand is the lowest he has seen in his 30 years of recruiting.

At the same time, he says, more executives are feeling skittish about taking on diversity staff.

During the pandemic, some companies moved people into diversity leadership if they were an ethnic minority, says Dani Monroe, even when they weren’t qualified. Monroe served as CDO for Mass General Brigham, a Boston-based hospital system and one of the largest employers in the state, until 2021 and convenes a yearly gathering of more than 100 CDOs.

“These were knee-jerk reactions,” she says of the hurried CDO hires, adding that some of those elevations didn’t create much impact, leaving both sides feeling disillusioned.

On-the-job Obstruction 

American workers are split on the importance of a diverse workforce, surveys find.  Most indicate they would be happier without it.

Diversity kommisars also encounter obstruction from top executives, says Melinda Starbird, a human resources and diversity executive who has worked at AT&T, Starbucks and OfferUp, an online marketplace. Leaders sometimes associate DIE with mandates, such as the equal-employment rules that apply to federal contractors. Those requirements for compliance can create executive resistance that bleeds over into other cultural or policy shifts, such as adding Juneteenth as a company holiday, she says. 

Many diversity executives feel a lack of buy-in from their colleagues. In a survey of 138 diversity executives conducted this spring by World 50 Group, a networking organization for corporate leaders, only 41% said they felt support from colleagues.

Since the Supreme Court overturned affirmative action in June, companies are anticipating spillover legal action could have an impact on them. Those that are still hiring DIE kommisars want people who can help the board navigate the political and legal landscape of diversity work and figure out how to support political correctness at the corporate level says Tina Shah Paikeday, global leader of Russell Reynolds’s diversity, equity and inclusion practice. 

People are more resistant to company-backed efforts to advance diversity when they are worried about their own jobs, whether because of impending layoffs or disruptions from AI, says David Kenny, chief executive of Nielsen, the media-ratings company. 

In the wake of massive financial backlash, giants like Target, Disney and Anheuser-Busch are motivating other companies to reconsider the value of DIE, many of them happy to learn from the mistakes of others.

Making the CDO job even more problematic is that for all of the emphasis on the need for social justice, CEOs and top management have not thrown their support behind it, and colleagues are wary of it, at best.

Diversity Inclusion and Equity, so popular in 2020 is being now reevaluated and seen for what it is, a smokescreen for reverse racism and critical race theory.

****

In Articles Tags DIE, Diversity Inclusion Equity, wokeness, critical race theory, critical theory, Seventh-day Adventist, woke, liberalism, dumb, the Bible, leftism, SDA pop-liberalism
← Satan's Final No Buy/No Sell SystemThe Growing Acceptance of the Wearing of Jewelry: Is It A Heaven or Hell Issue? →
Send Fulcrum7 a News Tip !
 
Featured
The Absurdity of Gender Ideologies
Jun 20, 2025
Gerry Wagoner
The Absurdity of Gender Ideologies
Jun 20, 2025
Gerry Wagoner
Jun 20, 2025
Gerry Wagoner
Three Conferences and Almost 100 Churches Vote to Reject the GC Vaccine Statements
Jun 18, 2025
NewsHound
Three Conferences and Almost 100 Churches Vote to Reject the GC Vaccine Statements
Jun 18, 2025
NewsHound
Jun 18, 2025
NewsHound
Is This Really What You Want Your Church Doing?
Jun 17, 2025
Gerry Wagoner
Is This Really What You Want Your Church Doing?
Jun 17, 2025
Gerry Wagoner
Jun 17, 2025
Gerry Wagoner
Ron Kelly and Conrad Vine Coming to Portland in August
Jun 12, 2025
NewsHound
Ron Kelly and Conrad Vine Coming to Portland in August
Jun 12, 2025
NewsHound
Jun 12, 2025
NewsHound
An Appeal to Leaders: The Future of the Church is at Stake | Pastor Ron Kelly
Jun 6, 2025
NewsHound
An Appeal to Leaders: The Future of the Church is at Stake | Pastor Ron Kelly
Jun 6, 2025
NewsHound
Jun 6, 2025
NewsHound
A Book to Avoid -- "Reclaiming The Prophet: An Honest Defense of Ellen White's Gift"
Jun 5, 2025
Gerry Wagoner
A Book to Avoid -- "Reclaiming The Prophet: An Honest Defense of Ellen White's Gift"
Jun 5, 2025
Gerry Wagoner
Jun 5, 2025
Gerry Wagoner
An Appeal to The Laity and Leadership of The Seventh-day Adventist Church
Jun 3, 2025
NewsHound
An Appeal to The Laity and Leadership of The Seventh-day Adventist Church
Jun 3, 2025
NewsHound
Jun 3, 2025
NewsHound
Pastor Bryce Bowman Leaving Michigan For the Carolina Conference
May 31, 2025
Gerry Wagoner
Pastor Bryce Bowman Leaving Michigan For the Carolina Conference
May 31, 2025
Gerry Wagoner
May 31, 2025
Gerry Wagoner
Ardmore  SDA Church Votes Unanimously To Reject Adcom Statements
May 31, 2025
NewsHound
Ardmore SDA Church Votes Unanimously To Reject Adcom Statements
May 31, 2025
NewsHound
May 31, 2025
NewsHound
Collegedale Church Summer VBS Mission Offers Yoga Sessions To Young Girls
May 29, 2025
NewsHound
Collegedale Church Summer VBS Mission Offers Yoga Sessions To Young Girls
May 29, 2025
NewsHound
May 29, 2025
NewsHound

© FULCRUM7