Twitter is showing other Silicon Valley firms it’s possible to set public goals for a more diverse workforce and actually meet them, especially if those goals are modest.
In December, 30 percent of the people in Twitter’s leadership positions — defined as those director-level and above — were women, the San Francisco-based company said Thursday. That compares with 22 percent in 2015 — and a goal of 25 percent. Twitter’s technical workforce was 9 percent underrepresented minorities, which met the company’s stated goal and was a gain from 7 percent the prior year.
Silicon Valley companies have been hesitant to set numbers to their broad efforts to diversify their workforces, fearing greater scrutiny. The industry has struggled to address the problem, given how much new hiring tends to rely on personal connections and fitting a company culture. Pinterest was one of the first to set quotas for its new hires. This year, the image-sharing site said it met two of them and is lowering the target for the third, because it was challenging to meet.
“We know that the effects of our actions — many of which were new for 2016 — cannot be immediate,” Twitter said in a blog post. “We are focused on sustained efforts that will help us draw more diverse talent, create great experiences and careers, and foster a culture of belonging that fully lives up to the spirit of community on Twitter itself.”