Photo: iStock | Dzmitry Dzemidovich
The recent departure of chief diversity officers (CDO) from Disney, Netflix, and Warner Bros. Discovery highlights the high turnover and burnout rate of the position.
According to HR Grapevine, some HR professionals have expressed on LinkedIn that the exodus of DEI execs illustrates that the role is increasingly being considered nonessential and should be integrated across departments.
Marvyn Harrison, chief growth officer at BELOVD Agency, wrote on LinkedIn: “Moving forward, let’s merge DEI into our people and culture strategies. We need to advance HR education and equip all people and culture leaders with the necessary tools and knowledge to champion a workplace that is equitable, safe, and centered around every individual.”
Turnover at the CDO position was high even before the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020 both hiked investments in and stirred up backlash against diversity and inclusion initiatives.
“Frustrated by talk but little action and a lack of resources, many diversity executives find themselves rotating through C-suites,” the Wall Street Journal wrote in an article in July 2020.
Among others challenged establishing diversity leadership, Nike this past March hired its fourth head of diversity efforts since 2020. In late May, Uber’s diversity head was placed on leave after infuriating corporate employees by holding a series of “Don’t Call Me Karen” events.
According to a 2021 McKinsey report, 53% of Fortune 500 companies have a CDO or equivalent role. A study by Russell Reynolds, however, found the average CDO tenure was only 1.8 years.
A recent article from Senior Executive found one reason for the higher turnover rate for CDOs is plentiful opportunities available at other organizations, but other factors include officers becoming frustrated or burned out by inadequate resources, unrealistic expectations, lack of engagement in DEI initiatives by other C-level executives, and fluctuating DEI commitments from the top level.Monster’s January 2023 Future of Work report found 38% of recruiters indicating that workers ask about their potential employers’ DEI efforts “more than ever,” but 11% of employers said DEI programs “are among the first to go when they are forced to cut costs,” only behind company events and bonuses.
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