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We conducted our Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DE&I) survey in the summer of 2020—amidst a global pandemic and political and racial unrest in the United States. As expected, each of the crises had an impact on the banking industry. Our survey participation may reflect the reality of this time, as responses were down 10% from our 2019 survey even with an increased focus on diversity, equity, and inclusion in organizations.
With this as a backdrop, we found trends that indicate a continued and/or increased focus on DE&I priorities, practices, and programs. Many banks are beginning the process of creating meaningful and impactful goals that will guide actions to increase DE&I in their organizations.
The following are some key findings and trends specific to the financial institutions in our survey:
It’s time to turn talk into action and focus on the pipeline, promotion, and retention. In January of 2021, LinkedIn conducted a survey of 2,000 Black professionals and the findings support this premise. From the LinkedIn data: “While 78% of Black professionals surveyed believe their senior leaders value DEI, some 40% say this support is ‘more talk than action,’ and think their companies have not made any material changes to policies or culture.” The LinkedIn survey also found that, “over half of Black professionals (51%) believe that leadership transparency on decisions that impact careers (e.g., promotion, pay, performance management) would make their current workplace feel more inclusive and equitable and 40% of Black professionals believe mentorship/career coaching opportunities will help lead to a more equitable workplace culture.”
It’s worth noting how difficult culture change can be and that it often takes years, not months; however, actions speak louder than words. Now is the time to find levers within your organization to pull that can begin to improve your individual situation.
Diversification of your talent pipeline is key to improving the diversity of your organization overall. Seed the pipeline with diverse applicants and move diverse employees through the pipeline at an equal rate to white males—at each level within the organization. Organizations can make strides by focusing on the diversity of candidate pools at each stage of the recruiting and hiring process and when recruiting externally for each of the segments of the talent pipeline—from entry- to senior-level—and then by ensuring that there is equal opportunity to be considered for promotions.
Be aware of barriers or “glass ceilings.” In our survey, women and people of color reach the managerial ranks in banking nearly proportionately to their representation in the overall industry’s workforce yet there is a barrier to further advancement into positions of senior leadership. Our data show that less than half (44%) of responding firms are using approaches to increase diversity when promoting employees from within, similar to the percentage of firms using approaches to increase diversity when recruiting.
Retaining diverse talent by focusing on inclusion can help you maintain momentum. We asked if organizations had programs, policies, and/or practices in place that focus on inclusion and just more than half said yes—leaving 43% with potential diverse-talent retention issues. On a positive note, the same percentage of respondents said they conduct engagement surveys that ask questions to measure inclusion and belonging, which are key indicators of retention risk.
In summary, prioritizing DE&I, removing barriers, and creating formal programs to close the representation gap can put you on the road to making your proclamations and policies lead to an increase in female and minority representation in executive and management positions and throughout the leadership pipeline.
There are financial organizations that are using levers appropriate for their circumstances to increase the representation of women and minorities at management and leadership levels. They do so in various ways and are showing it is a priority to close the representation gap and thus narrow the pay gap. These are complex issues; however, starting where you can best utilize the readily available levers for improvement can launch your DE&I programs and begin to create a culture of diversity, equity, and inclusion that will connect to your organizational strategies and goals and strengthen employee, vendor, and community engagement.