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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWorkplace diversity: Apple employs far more blacks, Hispanics than its tech rivals
If your workforce is almost all white in an area that is demographically far different, it means that you aren't picking the best candidates
because it means being white is one of the "qualifications" (unstated and often unintentional too) that helps people get hired. And
having a whiter workforce does nothing to make your products better.
By Julia Love and Patrick May
Posted: 08/13/2014 10:17:40 AM PDT
CUPERTINO -- Apple's workforce may be 70 percent male and 55 percent white, but the company still managed Tuesday to hand in one of the most impressive diversity score cards in Silicon Valley.
In revealing for the first time the demographic breakdown of its workforce, Apple reported that 18 percent of its employees are black and Hispanic, which compares to 5 percent for Google and Twitter and 6 percent for Facebook and Yahoo. The release of the report, following similar actions by major Silicon Valley companies, comes amid a heightened focus on the nature of the people who power the valley.
Apple was one of the last major tech companies to respond to advocates' calls for information as debate rages in Silicon Valley and beyond about the diversity of the tech workforce. The Mercury News began pushing for such information from major tech companies in 2008, but most resisted disclosure. Rev. Jesse Jackson, whose Rainbow PUSH Coalition began prodding tech companies to open up about their ranks earlier this year, gave Apple above-average marks for diversity, though he sees ample room for improvement.
In a letter accompanying the report, Apple CEO Tim Cook agreed that the company must do better.
"Let me say up front: As CEO, I'm not satisfied with the numbers on this page," he wrote. "We're making progress, and we are committed to being as innovative in advancing diversity as we are in developing our products."
closeupready
(29,503 posts)for skilled labor by agreeing amongst themselves informally not to poach talent from each other.
>>Confidential internal Google and Apple memos, buried within piles of court dockets and reviewed by PandoDaily, clearly show that what began as a secret cartel agreement between Apples Steve Jobs and Googles Eric Schmidt to illegally fix the labor market for hi-tech workers, expanded within a few years to include companies ranging from Dell, IBM, eBay and Microsoft, to Comcast, Clear Channel, Dreamworks, and London-based public relations behemoth WPP. All told, the combined workforces of the companies involved totals well over a million employees.
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This is just a tiny sample of the overwhelming evidence used by both the Justice Departments antitrust division, and the District Court judge in San Jose, to debunk the company executives claims that each had coincidentally implemented identical non-solicitation policies at the same time, with the same companies, without knowing what the other side was doing.
From that point on, the secret cartel expanded. Later that year, in September 2005, eBay CEO Meg Whitman called Schmidt complaining that Googles recruiters were hurting profits and business at eBay. Schmidt emailed Googles Executive Management Committeethe companys top executives summarizing Whitmans, and the valleys view that competing for workers by offering higher pay packages was unfair:<<
http://pando.com/2014/03/22/revealed-apple-and-googles-wage-fixing-cartel-involved-dozens-more-companies-over-one-million-employees/
I'd wager they care about the communities in which they live about as much as they evidently care about respecting laws against monopolistic behavior.
FSogol
(45,526 posts)It was reported on DU, IIRC.