
The Diversity Index
Description
Nearly 50 years after the Civil Rights Movement, there is a new crisis of opportunity in corporate America. Based on the author's groundbreaking study of Fortune 100 companies, <i>The Diversity Index</i> identifies a barrier that has formed as white women have outpaced people of color and, along with white male executives, have wound up creating a persistent racial ceiling. In addition, the quest for global profits has created worldwide competition for the corporate suite, and U.S.-born minorities and whites are losing out.
This isn't only a civil rights issue, as studies have shown that businesses with a strong com mitment to diversity outperform their peers. The book takes an in-depth look at companies that have struggled to find the perfect leadership mix. Detailing the stories of executives of General Electric, Hewlett Packard, Merck, and PepsiCo, The Diversity Index distills into 10 clear steps the methods that the most successful companies used to develop integration, keep it growing, and empower their employees to develop new products and markets.
More details
Person
<b>Susan E. Reed</b> (Boston, MA) is an award-winning journalist who has covered almost every aspect of the workplace for 25 years for CBS News, the <i>New York Times</i>, the <i>American Prospect</i>, and other publications. She writes a business column for the international news website GlobalPost.com.
Content
Contents
Introduction
CHAPTER 1- The Diversity Buffet
CHAPTER 2- Merck's Deliberate Strategy: Just Do It
CHAPTER 3- A Plan for Progress
CHAPTER 4- The Reality of Change Must Accompany
the Rhetoric of Change
CHAPTER 5- The Cost of Exclusion
CHAPTER 6- Scaling Up: Creating a Minority Supply Chain
CHAPTER 7- No Room at the Top
CHAPTER 8- Affinity Groups: Plans for Progress for Employees
CHAPTER 9- Importing the Important People
CHAPTER 10- A New Plan for Progress
Epilogue
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index