Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Book Cover
book
BookBook
Author Reed, Susan E.

Title The diversity index : the alarming truth about diversity in corporate America and what can be done about it / Susan E. Reed.

Imprint New York : AMACOM, ©2011.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Middletown, Russell Library - Adult Nonfiction  331.133 REE    Check Shelf
Description vii, 294 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents The diversity buffet -- Merck's deliberate strategy: just do it -- A plan for progress -- The reality of change must accompany the rhetoric of change -- The cost of exclusion -- Scaling up: creating a minority supply chain -- No room at the top -- Affinity groups: plans for progress for employees -- Importing the important people -- A new plan for progress.
Summary As we mark the 50th anniversary of President Kennedy's Executive Order calling for a thoroughly integrated workplace, it's time to assess which corporations have contributed the most to this advancement and which have not. While it's true that more women and minorities can be found at the top of many corporations, troubling patterns have emerged. The partial application of diversity has resulted in the formation of a persistent white ceiling in corporate America as white women have outpaced people of color. More than 40 percent of the Fortune 100 corporations have no minorities among their executive officers. Minority females have fared the worst. In addition, globalization has resulted in many corporations preferring multinational diversity to national diversity, and U.S. minorities and whites are losing out. The majority of Asian and Hispanic executive officers in the Fortune 100 were born outside of the United States. In large numbers, Canadian and European competitors are being promoted ahead of their American-born, white male counterparts. Based on award-winning journalist Susan E. Reed's groundbreaking study of Fortune 100 companies, The Diversity Index considers the historical reasons we went wrong, taking a close look at the "Plans for Progress" protocol developed in 1961, which defined the steps of affirmative action. It was initially considered a failure for not providing immediate results. This book analyzes the long-term, widespread effectiveness of the plan, and reveals the stories behind the few companies that have made a difference, breaking down the 10 simple steps you can take at your own organization to fully develop integration, keep it growing, and empower your employees to develop new products and markets. The book shares the fascinating stories of executives at General Electric, Hewlett Packard, Lockheed Martin, Merck, and PepsiCo, recounting their inspiring--and instructive--struggles to make their way up the ladder, as well as to pave the way for others going forward. -- From the Inside Flap.
Subject Diversity in the workplace -- United States.
Executives -- United States.
Diversity in the workplace. (OCoLC)fst00895719
Executives. (OCoLC)fst00917875
United States. (OCoLC)fst01204155
ISBN 9780814416495
0814416497
-->
Add a Review