Archived: Return-to-office mandates threaten corporate diversity goals and create challenge for recruiters

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A return to office could erase the socioeconomic and racial diversity progress companies have made.

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Last week, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy dug in his heels and called employees back to the office at least three days a week. He’s the latest in a string of CEOs demanding an in-office return

One aspect of the to-return or not-to-return debate that’s seldom covered is the DEI implication. Mandating employees’ physical presence essentially cuts access to the diverse talent pools employers have fervently said they’re trying to engage. 

Besides the fact that Black employees say they prefer working from home, citing the ability to escape the microaggressions and implicit biases of everyday office life, in-office work will almost certainly affect recruiters’ ability to reach more underrepresented employees.

Companies on the coasts will be hard-pressed to find as diverse a talent pipeline in pricey hubs like San Francisco and New York City. For one, about 60% of Black people in the U.S. live in the South, vs. one-third of the rest of private-sector workers, according to a report by McKinsey. The Black labor force is chiefly concentrated in ten states, including Texas, Florida, Georgia, and Virginia. “Companies located in states with low Black populations—for example, much of the West and parts of the Midwest and Northeast—will need to think differently about how they effectively attract Black talent,” according to McKinsey.

In other words, if your headquarters are in San Francisco and you’re demanding office return, you might lose access to much of the U.S. Black labor force. And providing relocation fees is unlikely to help, either, especially as workers nationwide see the widespread layoffs in tech and finance—industries that are largely centered in expensive cities and have left now laid-off workers with pricey accommodations.

Jan Shelly Brown, a partner at McKinsey, encourages leaders moving back to an in-person model to consider geography in their decision-making.

“When companies are doing hub planning on where their footprint should be, there is an overlay of things like if there is a university close by that has a strong IT program,” she says. “One of the other criteria they need to think about is if Black tech talent is there.”

Amber Burton
amber.burton@fortune.com
@amberbburton

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