Latinos are a huge part of Silicon Valley โ but the same canโt be said for the boards of its companies
SOURCE: Oportun
DESCRIPTION:
By Allison Levitskyย ย โย ย Tech Industry Reporter, Silicon Valley Business Journal
Raul Vazquezย is an anomaly in Silicon Valleyย โ the CEO of Oportun has served on the boards of not one, but two Fortune 500 companies.
That sets him apart in a region with 45 Fortune 1000 companies run by hundreds of board members, but only 13 who are Latinx.
โThereโs more work to do,โ said Vazquez, who has been on Intuit Inc.โs board since 2016 after serving on Staples Inc.โs board for three years. โDiverse boards lead to better results, and thatโs because I think a diverse board and a diverse management team is better able to serve a broad, diverse customer base.โ
Data is clear that those of Hispanic descent are underrepresented on corporate boards. In California, Latinos and Latinas make up 39% of the stateโs population, but just 13% of the stateโs public companies had a Latinx board director as of July 1, according to theย Latino Corporate Directors Association. The divide becomes starker when considering how other groups are represented: Asians make up 15% of Californiaโs population but serve on 42% of the 662 public company boards in the state, while Blacks, who comprise 6%, are on 16% of company boards.
Granted, change is on the way as Californiaโs Assembly Bill 979 bans all-white public company boards this year. (More than one-third of Californiaโs public companies had all-white boards in 2020.) Already, U.S. companies added 82 Latinx board directors between January and March โ a 331% increase in appointments from the first quarter of 2020.
But advocates say thereโs still a long way to go, both nationally and in Silicon Valley.
โMost of these corporate CEOs do not have experience with our community, or even with this region โ they may not have been born and raised in California, or even the Southwest,โ saidย Ron Gonzales, the president of the Hispanic Foundation of Silicon Valley who also served as San Joseโs only Latino mayor. โWhen they think race issues, they think โBlack and white.โ But if youโre raised in California, when you think race issues, you think about Latinos.โ
And when it comes to boardrooms of Fortune 1000 companies, a new report from KPMG and the Latino Corporate Directors Association finds Latinx people have made โno progress in the last decade by any measureโ since they hold only 3% of seats nationally.
โItโs important for us Hispanics and Latinos that weโre not just talking about it, but weโre showing what the reality truly is,โ saidย Jose Rodriguez, a retired audit partner at KPMG who led the firmโs sponsorship of LCDA.
The business and political landscapes are forcing a change to the boardroom dynamic. AB 979 requires that by the end of this year, public companies based in California must have at least one director who is an underrepresented minority โ either a person of color or an LGBT individual โ and before the end of 2022, they must have two or three, depending on the size of the board. Nationally, Nasdaq has proposed new rules that would require listed companies to โhave, or explain why they do not haveโ at least one or two directors who arenโt straight, cisgender, white men, depending on the size of the board.
Backlash and skepticism
Not everyone supports these efforts to diversify boards. Conservative activist group Judicial Watch sued Californiaโs secretary of state over AB 979 in September. In a statement issued at the time, Judicial Watch Presidentย Tom Fittonย called the law โbrazenly unconstitutionalโ and said such quotas are โslaps in the face to the core American value of equal protection under the law.โ The Pacific Legal Foundation also opposes AB 979, stating in an email that it โgets the concept of equality all wrong.โ
Keith Bishop, a corporate and securities law attorney in Orange County who served as Californiaโs commissioner of corporations in the 1990s, said AB 979 violates the federal Equal Protection Clause and the state constitution, which bars any class of citizens from receiving โprivileges or immunitiesโ that arenโt afforded to all citizens.
Bishop also worries that because the law relies on self-identification, boardmembers could lie about their ethnic background. And he takes issue with the notion of allowing race to be a factor in hiring, pointing out that the NBA has a large percentage of African American players.
โBusinesses are there to make money for their shareholders. They should want the best possible boards of directors โ the ones that contribute the most to the success of the company, just like the NBA wants the best basketball players they can get,โ Bishop said.
Advocates are quick to point to research that showsย better financial resultsย at companies with diverse leaders. McKinsey & Co. found in 2019 that companies whose executive teams ranked in the top quartile for ethnic diversity were 36% more likely to have above-average profitability than their counterparts in the bottom quartile. But Harvard Law School professorย Jesse Friedย questions the value of such correlations, stating inย a working paperย that โother factors, such as firm size or industry, could explain both higher returns and a more diverse board.โ
Opening the pipeline
Such skepticism is not the dominant narrative in Silicon Valley, where the current social climate has big companies โ at least publicly โ pledging support for diversity and inclusion efforts. But these commitments havenโt yet yielded much change in the boardroom. Nationally, technology lags 14 other industries when it comes to Latinx representation. Only 15% of U.S. tech companies on the Fortune 1000 have a Hispanic or Latinx board member โ compared to 42% of food, beverage and tobacco companies and 37% of transportation firms. According to LCDA research, Apple Inc., Tesla Inc. and Broadcom Inc. each have one, and HP Inc. has two.
Meanwhile, some of the biggest names in Big Tech have no Latinx representation. Among them: Alphabet Inc., Intel Corp., Facebook Inc. and Cisco Systems Inc.
โThere are some (companies) doing better than they were 10 years ago regarding employment, but theyโre all basically D-minus when it comes to board representation,โ said Gonzales. โThe other reality is, I think, most of these boards would rather move to Delaware than stay here in California and deal with this issue.โ
The Hispanic Foundation trains Latinx leaders to serve as nonprofit directors through its Latino Board Leadership Academy, and Gonzales said the foundation is in talks with several organizations about offering a similar program for corporate boards. Such a program would provide one more pipeline of talent for companies to tap โ but Gonzales and other advocates say there are plenty of worthy candidates that companies can find now. But they donโt necessarily run in the same social circles as company leaders, and may be ruled out because they donโt already have experience serving on a public company board.
โIf you make that a hard requirement, then itโs going to be much harder to find a Latino. Itโs going to be much harder to find a woman, because we havenโt had the same kinds of opportunities,โ said Vazquez, the CEO of Oportun since 2012 and a former Walmart executive who was an SVBJ Latinx Business Leadership honoree last year. โIf someone has conviction and they say, โYes, we need a Latino and Latina, and we think that they are going to be able to help,โ then hopefully some of those requirements become soft as opposed to hard,โ he said.
What happens at the top?
The Latino Corporate Directors Association is one group that offers help to companies looking to diversify their director candidate pools.
โWe donโt just hand them our member list,โ saidย Kathy Jurado Munoz, LCDAโs vice president for advocacy and demand. โWhat we do is we specifically look for those skillsets and attributes that theyโre looking for โ and we donโt even limit ourselves to our own membership.โ
For example, a top 50 bank that recently approached Rodriguez about an open board seat walked away with a list of more than 30 local candidates with relevant skills. The bank selected a director from LCDAโs list last month.
Companies that lack diversity in their workforce and on their executive teams may find that a diverse boardroom has a trickle-down effect on the rest of the company.
Vazquez said heโs seen that play out firsthand. Over the years, he has witnessed situations where minority business leaders โgot an opportunity that they might not have otherwise had โฆ that they absolutely deserved and have done an exceptional job with,โ thanks to a diverse boardโs talent decisions.
โWe all need to fight the tendency of being most comfortable with those who are most like us,โ Vazquez said. โTo the extent that youโve got a board that is not diverse, and that maybe skews all toward males, all things being equal, they may favor a candidate that is most like them.โ
But naming just one minority director to a corporate board isnโt enough, he said: โIโve had the good fortune to be in rooms where I felt very comfortable expressing an opinion that may have been a different one,โ Vazquez said. โYou want to have enough diversity so that no one ever feels like theyโre on an island."
KEYWORDS: NASDAQ: OPRT, Oportun, Latinx
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