
Why is DEI the right thing to do?
Everybody wants to say it's the right thing to do, and I'm going to just challenge people, it's not the right thing to do. It's a profitable thing to do. America is becoming more and more diverse. I’ll tell you what I mean by that. In 2014 American public schools had 51% of its students were diverse students. So usually you'll see that 20 years later, as they become adults, that the society is becoming the same way.
And that's because you have a lot of interracial marriages and things of that sort, which means that white people, Caucasians, by 2040, will be the minority, and so they are kicking and screaming going out the door under the guise that you want us to not look at the data, but we look at data because, as I said, many of us are highly educated, educated at the finest universities, and we all want to have a level playing field. The problem is, because America has had a four hundred year history of slavery, you will never have a level playing field. It is very stressful to go into settings and you're judged negatively by the color of your skin and not the content of your character.
What is behind the pushback on DEI programs?
The only reason why DEI even took off after George Floyd's murder is because it that signalled that African Americans and Asian Americans are being harassed by public servants, who they pay. We pay taxes in America, but people want to act like diverse populations are poor and we're not poor. We make up half of the GDP for America, and that number is growing even faster
And so the white population, who has been pretty dominant and has kind of super imposed their culture on everyone else. Is continually trying to superimpose their culture when we're saying we're just not going to tolerate it any longer. But rather than be obnoxious, what we've been doing is we just spend our money in places that are welcoming to us.
The only reason why DEI came out as a department was because George Floyd highlighted the inequities that still happen in America. They tell African Americans, forget slavery. I can't forget 400 years of slavery when I'm still dealing with the attitudes and bias that created it
So, when a company says that I don't want to do DEI, what you're basically saying is that you're going to be obnoxious, and you want us to spend our money, to be obnoxious, because let's face it, we want a level playing field. We've always wanted a level playing field as diverse populations, but it's just not possible in America when you have the mainstream infrastructure which is totally biased in the decisions that they make, and the proof of it is you've seen lots of brands make commercial decisions that are totally highly offensive.
Can you give me an example of that?
Gucci. Gucci came out one point and had a turtleneck that looked like a Ku Klux Klan hood. Well, then you had Adidas that came out with a shoe, a tennis shoe, that looked like a slave shackle. So, you've had those happen with corporations over the years, and part of why that happened is because you didn't have ambassadors to markets that would educate you that that's highly offensive. You just went on and just did it without checking with anybody, because you just think, you know your opinion matters so much that you don't think that other people's opinions matters. And that's a problem.
The only reason why DEI came out as a department was really because with the George Floyd, it highlighted the inequities that still happen in America, because the way that America has run, they tell particularly African Americans, oh, forget slavery. I can't forget 400 years of slavery when I'm still dealing with the attitudes and bias that created slavery. It didn't change. It passed from one generation to the next, and now I have modern people who are in corporations, who are in charge of other people who've been ingrained by their parents, their grandparents, their great grandparents.
They have the same attitudes and biases that those people had that created slavery. So, that has not changed, and so DEI came about to hopefully rectify that. Now, did DEI come out, and what was it effective? I'm gonna be honest, it was not because we're not going to change people's unconscious biases by having unconscious bias in ours.
Do you think a lot of it wasn't sincere enough or wasn't done for the right reasons?
Done for the right reasons, but it should have been done differently to me at the end of the day, and this is just my personal opinion, because I'm a business person. Businesses are here to make money. That should really be their only goal is to make money.
But in making that money, you have to look at strategy, and you have to look at culture. Your internal culture defines what your strategy is going to be. You can't divorce the two.
I’ll give you a good example. If I want to go after the Hispanic market, I'm not Hispanic. So I hired a Hispanic ambassador to teach me about the Hispanic population, because it's not one population, it is multiple populations.
And what they do for one may be offensive for the other. You need to know that, and the only way you learn that is through ambassadors. If you don't have employees who are your ambassadors, you hire consultants of that market who will educate you about that market, and we do it all the time when we go international, just like when a company goes to China.
They're not going to go to China without a Chinese ambassador, a Chinese translator, you need somebody who knows the Chinese culture.
So why would it be any different when you're going into a market? Corporate America thinks it knows and it makes mistakes. They apologise and think is just business as usual, and it's not business as usual right now, because diverse markets make up 50% of the American GDP.