How businesses can truly champion diversity

Action, Allies, Achievements, and Accountability are the cornerstones of a strategy for achieving diversity goals. As the CEO of Hyve Dynamics, Cecilia Harvey works with the leadership team to ensure that diversity and inclusion is reflected in our strategy and operations. She does this, not just because she is passionate about it, or because the tech industry is one of the least diverse, but because it makes both moral and commercial sense.

Below are some specific methods companies of all sizes can truly become diversity champions rather than just playing lip service.

Action: Develop and Cultivate A Diverse Talent Pipeline

The core of any strategy is a diverse talent 'pipeline'.  The pipeline provides a source of qualified resources to fill open roles and opportunities. Many organisations struggle with achieving diversity goals because they don’t have this in place. Talent pipelines should address three areas: (a) senior leadership, (b) employees, and (c) suppliers & partners. It should also consider sourcing from diverse communities of qualified talent.

Senior Leadership:

Diversity needs to be reflected across leadership teams, the board of directors and management committees. At Hyve Dynamics the governing and advisory boards’ composition is 30% black and 60% people of colour. It did not set targets or quotas. It achieved diversity organically because qualified candidates that were also ethnically diverse were already part of the community. The  senior leadership team already engaged with an ethnically diverse network. Hence, when opportunities arose Hyve Dynamics organically had a pool of ideal candidates that just happened to be people of colour. Additional actions that can be taken to improve diversity among senior leadership include the following:

  • Prepare High Potential Diverse Talent for Leadership - Identify high potential diverse talent within your company. Offer learning and development resources that prepare individuals for leadership opportunities (e.g. leadership training, executive coaching).
  • Perform Succession Planning - Ensure diversity is a focus during succession planning.  Align high potential diverse talent to future leadership opportunities. Create professional development plans which allows candidates to address gaps and receive the necessary experience and sponsorship to successfully be promoted to leadership positions.
  • Conduct Proactive Industry Talent Mapping - Even before a vacancy exists, identify qualified diverse talent that would be good candidates for future opportunities. Also leverage relationships with partners and suppliers that can be a potential source for referring qualified diverse talent that are seeking opportunities. 

Diverse Suppliers & Partners:

Economic inclusion and hence providing commercial opportunities to diverse qualified vendors needs to be a key component of a diversity strategy.  At Hyve it outsources many of the non-core operations and functions to vendors and partners. Identify opportunities to outsource and partner with diverse suppliers. Additional actions to support diverse suppliers may include the following:

  • Product and Service Donation - Donate your company’s products and/or services to diverse communities and organisations focused on fostering diversity and inclusion.
  • Donate - Commit funding to initiatives and nonprofits focused on delivering programming focused on addressing racism.

Employees:

Developing and cultivating a pipeline of qualified employees is the best way to recruit and retain diverse talent.  Pipeline development is a long-term solution that removes “tick in the box” exercises such as quotas and other forced means of achieving diversity. Support a diverse employee pipeline with the following actions:

  • Diversify Recruiters - Ensure there is ethnic diversity among and a focus on diversity from internal and external recruiters. Recruiters are gatekeepers. You want to ensure that diverse candidates are getting through to you.
  • Review Sources of Talent - Evaluate the communities and schools where job candidates are sourced. Develop relationships with diverse universities and schools. Create opportunities in which the students have exposure to your company through various programming (e.g.hackathons, internships, job experiences, career talks).

Allies: Effectively Leveraging Support

Allies must be active contributors to any diversity strategy. An ally is not someone that simply says they don’t condone racism. An ally’s words are reinforced by action: “I stand with you and this is how I will show my support”.  Below are some ways allies can show support in an impactful way:

  • Show up: Strength is in numbers. Attend events and programming focused on achieving diversity and denouncing racism.
  • Be comfortable with being uncomfortable: Leaders need to encourage having those “uncomfortable conversations” and showing empathy.  It is only until you push beyond that “comfort zone” do we achieve understanding, healing and growth.
  • Ask for help: You don’t have to do it alone. There is an opportunity to engage other companies and individuals that are committed to improving diversity. Ask them to join you in your efforts and also join them in their efforts.

Achievements: Amplify Success Stories and Be Transparent on Progress

Highlighting achievements allows us to learn from one another as we work to address diversity challenges.

  • Storytelling - Amplify the voices of ethnically diverse employees, leaders and partners by creating platforms and opportunities that allow for them to share their unique insights and perspectives. Opportunities may include existing company events and programming (e.g. town halls; conferences; special events).
  • Share Success Stories - Highlight leaders within the company that are making positive contributions inside and outside of the company in regards to promoting diversity and inclusion. Also share the internal success stories about the company’s efforts focused on diversity and inclusion.

Accountability: Ownership and Transparency

Many efforts fail because management is not held accountable for achieving diversity goals. To ensure focus, goals should be aligned to performance reviews and compensation. Other ways to provide accountability include the following:

  • Form a Board of Directors Ad-Hoc Committee focused on improving ethnic diversity.  At a board level this committee will be empowered to deliver change.
  • Provide Transparency on Statistics and Progress - Disclose statistics regarding ethnic diversity senior leadership and workforce composition and metrics on the progress of diversity strategy. Publishing metrics helps to keep focus and hold individuals accountable. 
  • Clearly Define the Composition of “Diversity” and “Ethnic Minorities” - Provide detail regarding the categories which define “ethnic minorities”. At Hyve for diversity it separates the metrics between women and ethnic minorities. Also for ethinic minorities it provides a further breakdown to ensure that various ethnicities are not consolidated under one umbrella.

The days are gone where leaders can be 'indifferent' or silent about social issues such as denouncing racism. We have reached a tipping point. As leaders, it must be a force for change by challenging existing conditions and using its influence to shape the future we all want to see.

Startup Details

Startup Details

TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT
CB RANK (COMPANY)

Hyve Dynamics

CECILIA HARVEY is the Chief Executive Officer of Hyve Dynamics. With over 20 years experience in finance and technology. Cecilia is an advocate for responsible technology leadership that seeks to inspire, elevate and disrupt global businesses and communities.

Graduating from Wellesley College in Wellesley, Massachusetts, Cecilia was soon captivated by the energy of Wall Street and the lure of a career in banking. After working her way up in the banking industry, her roles have since included being the COO of Citigroup Markets and Securities Services Technology, and positions with Morgan Stanley, Barclays Capital and IBM.

Cecilia’s recent achievements include being featured in Forbes Magazine in 2019 as a leading lady in technology, a 2018 We Are The City TechWomen 100 winner. Cecilia is also the founder and chair of Tech Women Today, a professional organisation focused on connecting and advancing women across various areas of technology.

  • Headquarters Regions
    London, UK
  • Founded Date
    2019
  • Founders
    Cecilia Harvey
  • Operating Status
    Active
  • Number of Employees
    11-50