Alphabet-owned Google is set to review its diversity based hiring programs and end goal to hire more employees from underrepresented groups, reported Reuters.
“In 2020, we set aspirational hiring goals and focused on growing our offices outside California and New York to improve representation,” Fiona Cicconi, Alphabet’s chief people officer, said in an email to staff on Wednesday, a copy which was reviewed by Reuters. “…but in the future we will no longer have aspirational goals.”
Google had for years been among the most vocal companies pushing for more inclusive policies in the wake of protests against the police killings of George Floyd and other Black Americans in 2020.
Google had for years been among the most vocal companies pushing for more inclusive policies in the wake of protests against the police killings of George Floyd and other Black Americans in 2020.
In 2020, CEO Sundar Pichai set a goal to have 30% more of its leaders from underrepresented groups by 2025. At the time, about 96% of Google’s U.S. leaders were white or Asian, and 73% globally were men.
In 2021, it began to evaluate executive performance on team diversity and inclusion after a prominent leader of artificial intelligence research said the company abruptly fired her after she criticized its diversity efforts. Google’s chief diversity officer Melonie Parker said in a 2024 interview with BBC that the company had hit 60% of its five-year goals.
On Wednesday, an Alphabet spokesperson said the company did not have updated figures regarding Pichai’s goals.
Alphabet’s annual filing with the U.S. SEC on Wednesday showed it omitted a line saying it was “committed to making diversity, equity and inclusion part of everything we do and to growing a workforce that is representative of the users we serve.”
That statement appeared in annual reports from 2021 to 2024. The spokesperson said the line was removed to reflect its review of DEI programs.
“This is a real attack on gains that workers have made in the tech industry through movements fighting against racism, gender and LGBTQ discrimination, going all the way back to the civil rights movement. This is part of a troubling right-wing, anti-worker trend developing within tech companies that AWU (Alphabet Workers Union) is committed to fighting against,” said Parul Koul, a software engineer and the union’s president, in a statement.