Diversity Matters
New research makes it
increasingly clear that companies with more diverse workforces perform better
financially.
We
know intuitively that diversity matters. It’s also
increasingly clear that it makes sense in purely business terms. Our latest
research finds that companies in the top quartile for gender or racial and
ethnic diversity are more likely to have financial returns above their national
industry medians. Companies in the bottom quartile in these dimensions are
statistically less likely to achieve above-average returns. And diversity is
probably a competitive differentiator that shifts market share toward more
diverse companies over time.
While correlation
does not equal causation (greater gender and ethnic diversity in corporate
leadership doesn’t automatically translate into more profit), the correlation
does indicate that when companies commit themselves to diverse leadership, they
are more successful. More diverse companies, we believe, are better able to win
top talent and improve their customer orientation, employee satisfaction, and
decision making, and all that leads to a virtuous cycle of increasing returns.
This in turn suggests that other kinds of diversity, for example, in age,
sexual orientation, and experience (such as a global mind-set and cultural
fluency) are also likely to bring some level of competitive advantage for
companies that can attract and retain such diverse talent.
McKinsey has been
examining diversity in the workplace for several years. Our latest report, Diversity Matters, examined proprietary data sets
for 366 public companies across a range of industries in Canada, Latin America,
the United Kingdom, and the United States. In this research, we looked at
metrics such as financial results and the composition of top management and
boards.1The findings were
clear:
·
Companies in the top
quartile for racial and ethnic diversity are 35 percent more likely to have
financial returns above their respective national industry medians.
·
Companies in the top
quartile for gender diversity are 15 percent more likely to have financial
returns above their respective national industry medians.
·
Companies in the bottom
quartile both for gender and for ethnicity and race are statistically less likely
to achieve above-average financial returns than the average companies in the
data set (that is, bottom-quartile companies are lagging rather than merely not
leading).
·
In the United States,
there is a linear relationship between racial and ethnic diversity and better
financial performance: for every 10 percent increase in racial and ethnic
diversity on the senior-executive team, earnings before interest and taxes
(EBIT) rise 0.8 percent.
·
Racial and ethnic
diversity has a stronger impact on financial performance in the United States
than gender diversity, perhaps because earlier efforts to increase women’s
representation in the top levels of business have already yielded positive
results.
·
In the United Kingdom,
greater gender diversity on the senior-executive team corresponded to the
highest performance uplift in our data set: for every 10 percent increase in
gender diversity, EBIT rose by 3.5 percent.
·
While certain industries
perform better on gender diversity and other industries on ethnic and racial
diversity, no industry or company is in the top quartile on both dimensions.
·
The unequal performance
of companies in the same industry and the same country implies that diversity
is a competitive differentiator shifting market share toward more diverse
companies.
We’re not suggesting
that achieving greater diversity is easy. Women—accounting for an average of
just 16 percent of the members of executive teams in the United States, 12
percent in the United Kingdom, and 6 percent in Brazil—remain underrepresented at
the top of corporations globally. The United Kingdom does comparatively better
in racial diversity, albeit at a low level: some 78 percent of UK companies
have senior-leadership teams that fail to reflect the demographic composition
of the country’s labor force and population, compared with 91 percent for
Brazil and 97 percent for the United States.
These numbers
underline the work that remains to be done, even as the case for greater
diversity becomes more compelling. We live in a deeply connected and global
world. It should come as no surprise that more diverse companies and
institutions are achieving better performance. Most organizations, including
McKinsey, must do more to take full advantage of the opportunity that diverse
leadership teams represent. That’s particularly true for their talent
pipelines: attracting, developing, mentoring, sponsoring, and retaining the
next generations of global leaders at all levels of organizations. Given the
higher returns that diversity is expected to bring, we believe it is better to
invest now, since winners will pull further ahead and laggards will fall
further behind.
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