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3 women of colour on how to boost diversity from the outside in

Marian Croak has a unique way of looking at the world. It probably explains why the inventor of one of 2020’s most essential technologies – Voice over Internet Protocol – and Google’s Vice-President of Engineering has hundreds of patents to her name.

The COVID-19 pandemic, has in her view, ‘gifted’ the world with increased awareness of inequities – and the chance to do something about them.

“If we can zero in on that gift we’ve been given to see what the world is truly like and where the gaps are… I think it would be so beneficial to address that huge amount of inequity,” she said at a session during the World Economic Forum’s inaugural Pioneers of Change Summit in November 2020.

McKinsey analysis showed that in April last year, Black lives and livelihoods in America were already disproportionately affected by the pandemic. More recent research found women – and particularly women of colour – were more likely to have been laid off or furloughed, while working mothers were picking up more of the childcare.

McKinsey and LeanIn.Org’s Women In The Workplace 2020 report also found that just 3% of C-suite roles were taken by Black women, compared to 19% of white women and 66% of white men.

So how do we turn this awareness of the world’s inequities that have been exacerbated by COVID-19 into action to make the world a more diverse and inclusive place?

For the sixth year in a row, the underrepresentation of women and women of colour cannot be explained by attrition alone.

Here, Croak and two other women leaders of colour share their thoughts.

Revathi Advaithi

The CEO of manufacturing company Flex and one of Fortune’s Most Powerful Women in Business 2020 says sponsorship will be key to levelling the playing field in 2021.

“All companies need to find a way to sponsor women, sponsor minorities, sponsor Black people, whether it is for supply chain work or for work within your own company. I’m not taking away from mentorship, [but] we don’t need more mentoring.

“We need people who, at the point they’re going to make a decision, stand up for that woman, that Black person or that minority. And say I will make sure they can get that job or be awarded that business. Until that can happen passionately everywhere, we’re not going to see change at the pace we’d like to see it. So we need more sponsors, consistently, all the time, everywhere.”

Marian Croak

The inventor draws on her own experience of persevering with the voice over IP: “When it first came into being, it was a total failure… and there were many sceptics… But you see what we’ve accomplished today, it’s ubiquitous. And thank goodness that people have the fortitude to keep going, despite it seeming to be impossible.”

She also sees the current lack of diversity as an opportunity in itself.

“We often say we want to sit at the table, we want to fit in, we want to be part of whatever it is… But [not sitting at the table] is often of benefit because it allows us to step back and really be able to observe in quite an objective way as to where the gaps are and what’s needed for change.

“If you’re included and need to feel like you’re part of a group, a lot of times that spoils your perspective, because there’s this temptation to think like the group, to conform to the group, whereas invention and innovation requires you to think out of the box, to be unique, to be different. And just by our very nature, and the way that society has constructed things, we are different.”

And she urges her students to understand and have realistic expectations of what it involves to achieve success. “The journey is just as important… You have to be good at what you want to become. The only way to get doors opened for you is to be impressive. So work so hard that you can’t be ignored.”
Source: World Economic Forum

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