Ongoing diversity struggles continue to plague Amazon
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The Breakdown You Need To Know:
Alicia Boler Davis, the senior vice president who oversees Amazon’s fulfillment operations, and David Bozeman are the former Black Amazon leaders who are now out. Boler Davis joined Amazon in 2019 from General Motors
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Even though the company tries to tout it doubled the number of Black employees in the U.S. at the director and vice president levels in 2020, and by another almost 70% in 2021. CultureBanx reported the company has continued to have issues sustaining Black leaders at the highest levels of the company.
“Though we’ve made substantial progress in hiring Level 8 and Level 10 black leaders the last two years, it’s not lost on any of us that we’re losing two of our most senior black leaders,” wrote Amazon CEO Andy Jassy in anemail continued.
Prime Diversity Problems:
Still only 5.5% of Amazon’s senior leaders were Black as of the end of 2021, according to company data. About 70% of Amazon’s U.S. workforce, largely its hourly workers that power its operations, are not white.
Amazon has proven it can dramatically reshape whole, seemingly disconnected industries, so leadership diversity should be easy to figure out. Research from McKinsey and MSC
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Situational Awareness:
The company is attempting to make their corporate board a little more woke by addressing the critical equity and corporate governance issues. Last year Amazon brought on former Goldman Sachs executive Edith Cooper to its board of directors and she is the only Black member, following Walgreens
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