How to foster true diversity and inclusion at work (and in your community) | Rosalind G. Brewer

68,292 views ・ 2020-12-23

TED


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00:12
Whitney Pennington Rodgers: Hi, Roz Brewer.
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Thanks so much for being with us today.
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Rosalind Brewer: Thank you for having me.
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WPR: We can just dive right in.
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We're right now in the last quarter of 2020,
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and I think that a lot of people would agree that we're in the midst
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of what's probably one of the largest reckonings around racial equity
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that we've had in this country in decades.
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And it's something that you've been such a vocal advocate for,
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both through your role at Starbucks
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and throughout your career of diversity and inclusion in the workplace.
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And so I'm curious just to hear from you to start off the conversation,
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what this moment means for DEI efforts,
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not just in corporate America but in business in general.
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RB: You are right
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that this has made many of us that are in the corporate setting and beyond
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to rethink the position on diversity and inclusion in the workplace.
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You know, let me start the conversation about where are we actually
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in diversity and inclusion in the corporate setting,
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and I will tell you that this is actually putting a spotlight on the weaknesses
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and maybe the lack of forethought
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and intensity that we should always have maintained on this subject all along.
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One of the things that I think it's been highlighting for most of us
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is that our biggest opportunity is inclusion.
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Because, you know, I have heard the stories so many times
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about how there's no Black talent out there,
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no Latinx talent for these particular roles.
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The talent is out there.
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I will tell you that it's underdeveloped,
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because I think we have spent more time trying to reach numbers
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than we have changing our environment
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where people feel safe,
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where they feel they can come to work and be their whole self,
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give it everything they've got,
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be their natural self
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and be respected for it and applauded for it,
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and for people to recognize and appreciate their differences
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and understand that they're differences,
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and if they're included in the conversations,
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that they're just a better resource for the companies.
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So I think there's so much opportunity in the inclusion space,
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because we focus too much on meeting metrics.
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WPR: And, you know, I think earlier this year
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when the protests began right after the death of George Floyd,
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we saw lots of organizations put out these statements of solidarity,
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these commitments to do more to be inclusive
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both in their workspace
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and for their customers and people who support their work.
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But then you also hear --
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I've heard a lot of business leaders say things like, "You know,
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we want to do something but don't really know where to start."
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And so I'm curious to hear from you just sort of what do you think
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are ways that you actually can make a real difference
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when it comes to thinking about diversity and inclusion
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and avoid sort of this performative justice?
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RB: Yes.
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So there's a few things that I think about in this space.
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First of all, when you think about an inclusive environment,
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you think about: Am I being heard?
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And most people with differences,
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they want to know that you are heard and that you are seen.
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And I really applaud the companies who have been spending time
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just putting themselves on a learning journey,
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you know, holding listening sessions,
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trying to make sure that we've got different viewpoints
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when big decisions are made.
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You know, there are some companies who are engaging their partner networks
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in ways that they've never done before.
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I think those are some early success factors
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that could lead us to different kinds of conversations.
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And I've been listening to a lot of my peers in different industries,
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and they're having their own personal aha moments,
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and they're actually checking themselves at the front door, saying,
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"I never thought," "I never knew,"
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"I didn't know what I was doing when I said X, or when I did this." Right?
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And so I think it starts with some very simple things.
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I'd say that there are a lot of steps to take
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before training and development, that's for sure.
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So those that are jumping quickly into training and development,
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I'd say put a pause on it and just get back to grassroots
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and hold listening sessions and then decide,
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what do you want to do?
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And then help those people of diverse backgrounds
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engage in those conversations about how they want to see change happen.
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They're the best resource for a lot of this
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and a lot of these discussions.
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I mean, I learned so much.
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I have breakfast sessions with the baristas and partners
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at Starbucks regularly.
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I just had one yesterday, and when my screen popped up,
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I had nine diverse randomly selected partners.
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We call our employees "partners."
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And it was such a rich conversation,
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and they began to network while I'm talking to them, right,
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they were learning from each other.
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And this wasn't a diversity conversation.
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We were actually kicking off our new financial year at Starbucks,
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and so this was actually a business conversation
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and a touch-base to see how you're doing
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while we're working remotely.
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And, you know, it starts there with building relationships
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and learning people for who they are and engaging them and saying,
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"I see you, I hear you."
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That goes such a long way that I think if we do more of that,
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I even think the engagement and performance
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just goes through the roof.
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WPR: And so what I hear you saying, then, is that it's less about
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this short-term "how can I respond to this moment right now?"
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and it's more about long-term engagement with people
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and making this part of the fabric of how you do your work.
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And so I'm curious also to hear a little bit about,
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just, I guess if there is a timeline,
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when people think about how quickly they should be responding to protests
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and to what's happening in this cultural moment.
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What should we actually be looking at
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as far as when we see this change actually materialize and take effect?
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RB: Yes. So I think there are some short-term things.
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There are some really key partnerships in the communities around our localities
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that are really important to also engage
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in some of the listening and learning sessions as well.
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I learn tons from organizations like the Legal Defense Fund,
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from the NAACP,
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and engaging those partnerships that we've had over the years,
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but changing the discussion of the conversation
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about how do we partner together.
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Because one of the things that I fear for being a retailer
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like Starbucks and many other companies
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is that I want my partners to feel not only safe, comfortable,
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heard and seen in the company,
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I want them to have that same experience in the community.
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And so that's when it comes full circle.
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I really want diverse BIPOC employees
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to feel like, you know, "I make a difference."
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First of all, I vote every year.
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I'm engaged in my community.
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And then I'm engaged in work.
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So I have value.
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And so I think there are some key partnerships
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that should happen right now
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so that we can make sure that our employees feel like
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they have a full way to engage in this change that's underfoot right now.
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WPR: And then I wonder, conversely,
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what sort of pitfalls have you seen business leaders fall into
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that are actually just not effective
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and are not supportive of efforts
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to be more inclusive and to diversify?
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What are some of the things that haven't worked?
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RB: Yeah, you know, I worry about the race for numbers, to meet numbers,
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because what you will find, I've found many times in my career,
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is that some of our best leaders have good intentions,
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but they don't understand.
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They don't understand the partner sitting next to them
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that looks different from them.
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And so I worry about when we race to numbers,
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because, you know what?
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The kind of country we live in, the world we live in,
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we all know how to make numbers work.
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What we don't know how to do is to build strong relationships
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that are lasting, that are valued.
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And I think that's where we need to start,
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is relationship-building and key partnerships.
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So I worry about the numbers base.
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WPR: And so, of course, I think we all remember a few years back,
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Starbucks had a very public issue.
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You were embroiled in that incident in Philadelphia
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around racial discrimination
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that led to Starbucks taking a step back and thinking about inclusion
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and implicit bias and racial sensitivity.
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So how did that experience help prepare you for this year,
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both as an individual business leader and then also as an organization?
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How did it help you approach what we've been experiencing
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in this country in the past few months?
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RB: So, that was a real example of leadership
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and, actually, where Starbucks had failed in selecting the right leadership
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for that store.
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And to give you an example,
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the person that was running that store
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was a very young, up-and-coming leader for the company,
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and to put her in a store in 18th and Spruce in Philadelphia
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was an opportunity for all of us.
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So in retrospect, one of the reasons why we did the antibias training
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was to make sure that we began those conversations.
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And when I talk about not just training --
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that training was very unique because it was self-engaged.
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They weren't being taught by an instructor.
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They had to have conversations with their peer baristas
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around diversity and inclusion amongst themselves.
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So it wasn't moderated by any leader in the company.
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It was self-instructive.
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And the conversations that were created
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once we had that kind of relationship-building --
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you know, we had some of our baristas asking us,
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"Can I take this home and talk to my father,
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who never let me take the Black girl to the prom?"
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You know, we started what we felt like a movement and a discussion
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that we have been able to really use from that point on
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in terms of the way we want to escalate the conversations
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and make change happen at Starbucks,
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and not only at Starbucks but in our communities,
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because there were quite a few organizations that we reached out to
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that we're still engaged with today
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that are helping us build community leadership as well.
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WPR: And is that the goal?
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I mean, you mentioning an employee who wanted to take their learnings home.
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Is the goal in thinking about how you approach these issues as an organization
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for your employees and your partners
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to see how they can move this beyond just their work life?
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RB: Sure. You know, a lot of this starts at home.
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It starts with what happens at your dinner table. Right?
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And so we can correct what happens and we're responsible for what happens
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when you come to work at Starbucks,
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but we also realize that we can only get them ever so far,
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but if you're at the table having some conversations
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that are counter to what you're learning in the workplace,
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you can't help but slow down your growth and your change.
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And so a lot of the work that we do around diversity and inclusion
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is open-sourced.
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So when we created the materials for the work
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when we had the closing of our stores on May 28th,
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we had given that to so many other companies for them to use,
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and even we're doing some work right now around Courageous Conversations.
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And in this remote world,
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we're allowing our partners to bring their families onto the camera
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or listen in the room
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as we have courageous conversations on diversity.
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So if Starbucks has a keynote speaker on a certain diversity topic,
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we invite the family in.
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And it's been really, it's been great.
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A lot of our senior executives have said,
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"This is starting new conversations with my teens at home,"
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who are either getting bullied ...
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These are changing the conversations about why we question
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some of the actions that we had around our house.
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And so we need to understand that to embrace this issue,
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it is not as small as numbers,
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it's not as small as just the workplace.
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It is very comprehensive.
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So we're trying to do something different here
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to change the conversations and then actually grow inclusion
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in a very, very grassroots way
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at Starbucks.
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WPR: And, of course, I would imagine as a Black woman and a business leader
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that these issues hit really close to home for you.
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And I'm curious just with your interactions
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with colleagues and counterparts at other organizations
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that perhaps there isn't that same level of investment
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because it isn't something that's as important personally.
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And I'm curious how you are able to begin those conversations
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with colleagues and counterparts
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who are in positions to bring about this sort of change
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in their own organizations
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or within Starbucks.
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How do you get them invested,
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and how do you, frankly, get them to care about this?
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RB: Yeah, that's a very good question.
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So, I have two children.
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I have a daughter who is 17 and a son who is 25.
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And quite honestly, when that situation happened
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in our Starbucks stores back in 2018,
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my son was the same exact age as Donte and Rashon
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and looks a lot like them, by the way,
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and would have been sitting in the Starbucks
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dressed the same way they were.
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So that incident alone was deeply personal to me,
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actually made me grab my chest, right?
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Because I knew at any given moment
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my husband or my son could get pulled over,
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and I'd get that call in the middle of the night.
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So it's deeply personal for me,
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and what I try to do is I share stories,
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and I talk very openly about my family and what we do on the weekends
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and our holiday traditions and all of those things.
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And I have no issue with someone leaning over to me,
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maybe one of my white counterparts,
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saying, "I don't understand that. What are they talking about?"
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when they hear something that's a little bit different than their culture.
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And I'm wide open to explain and have those conversations,
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because I feel like I really want to be a conduit for that.
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I always tell everyone, no question's too small or too big.
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Even with everything that's going on right now
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in our environment around social unrest,
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I've gotten tons of calls from my white peers at different companies
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saying, "Roz, what do you think? What are you hearing?
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Help me out here."
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I'll drop everything,
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because if I can help, and I'll tell the story,
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and I think most people know if they've known me over the years.
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I'm pretty frank and outspoken.
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And I'll also tell them when they've really messed up
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and what they need to do about it.
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And so I think I want more Black leaders
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to feel just as confident in doing that.
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I see no risk in it.
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I do realize that it begins a new relationship with some people,
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and some people can't take the tough conversations,
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but it's time for tough conversations.
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WPR: And, I mean, to that point,
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I imagine there are probably also people who,
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because these conversations are tough and uncomfortable,
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think maybe it's easier or better to just avoid having to do that
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and to have those conversations and discussions
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to stir the pot in some ways.
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And so what do you say to the people
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who think "Let's just try to lay low,"
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and I've heard some of this, too, in this moment, "Let the moment pass
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so that we can get back to business as usual"?
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RB: Yeah. Well, I'd first start off by saying how disgusted I am
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by that statement,
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because leaders lead in the moment,
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and you never know when you're going to be called upon.
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And if this isn't a calling,
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I don't know what is.
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And so when I get that call and say,
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"You know, I just think I should take the back seat
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and just kind of let this brew here and that calm down,"
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you know, we need to all -- it's an all-in moment.
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And leadership is not designated by your title.
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It's designated about how great you can create followership.
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And having thought leadership,
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people underestimate the opportunity
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to pick up the phone and call someone, and say, "How are you?
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How is this affecting you? How can I help?"
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That's pretty simple.
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You might decide it's something I can't help with,
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but you'd better darn sure pick up the phone
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and start feeling out the environment
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in your employee base, in your peers, in your leaders,
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because the time is now, and so I don't give them an out.
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I actually try and push them over the edge,
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because sometimes they are just kind of stuck, like, "What do I do?"
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And then the other thing that I personally have to do
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is to make sure that they understand
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that because I am at this level where I am,
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I'm not excluded from these issues, right?
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I know that when my husband jumps in his vehicle,
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I worry every time if he's out in the evening
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that he may not come back home the same way he left.
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I feel that way for my son and for my husband.
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17:29
I still get, even when I go shopping,
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I still get the look, am I stealing,
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watching me as I walk around the corner.
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And I don't know what else or how else I can look or act any different,
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so I just act like myself.
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I used to get dressed to go shopping.
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Now I never do that.
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If I'm spending my money, my money spends everywhere,
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and if I get that feeling that you're going to race me around the store,
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then I'm going to leave, and that's your loss.
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But I still get that, and so I worry.
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So I also try to help people understand that this is not a socioeconomic,
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once you've sort of "made it," you're out of the water.
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No.
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We're still, as someone with differences, visible differences, you're still at risk.
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WPR: And so much of this conversation also is about
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who's in leadership and who's making these decisions
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and representation at high levels.
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And I know that you've been really vocal about your own experiences
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as a woman color, person of color, as a Black woman,
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in these executive positions,
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and often feeling you are the only one in some rooms,
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and sort of the isolation of that,
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but also the challenges in making choices and getting things done
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when that's the case.
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And so I'm curious also,
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what are the opportunities that this moment presents
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for us to perhaps approach this differently,
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and how can people at different organizations
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who are looking to bring people in to positions of leadership,
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how can we approach this differently so that we can begin to see
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more people of color in these roles?
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RB: Sure.
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It's been my experience
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that I see tons of great, diverse talent coming in to companies,
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and then they're stuck.
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And what I see is the pipeline is very weak at a certain level,
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19:29
and once it gets to the point of trying to decide on a succession plan
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for who's next in line for the big jobs,
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there's this great talent that's like that mid-level manager area,
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then there's a big gap,
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and then there's maybe two at the top.
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And it puts a lot of pressure on those two on the top
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to try and go down and grab those that are just,
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maybe been with the company for two to five years,
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and lift them up.
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So what I think about is:
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How do we give extraordinary experiences
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to our youngest diverse talent
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so that they can get that exposure early on
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20:04
and begin to develop early on just like their white peers?
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20:08
And I think sometimes we celebrate too much
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20:12
that they are part of the company,
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20:14
but what we need to celebrate is, where is their progression?
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20:18
Where is their opportunity for growth?
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20:20
Who's listening to them,
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20:21
and who has their hands on them?
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20:23
And one of the things that we're doing at Starbucks
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is really having structured mentorship.
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But the mentorship looks a lot more like being a sponsor.
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20:35
And so, our executive leaders will be responsible for the development
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20:42
of our young, diverse talent
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20:45
and making sure that they're getting that exposure and those opportunities.
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20:48
And just imagine if you're a new hire in the company,
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and someone wants to meet with you at a senior level once a month,
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20:55
twice a year, even --
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20:57
that's game-changing.
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20:58
And so we have to reach our young talent early,
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21:03
and now this pipeline has got to close.
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21:06
We've got to fill it up
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21:07
and close this gap,
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because if not, I don't see a pathway
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for diverse executives, C-suite executives,
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in the next, I would say, three to five years,
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I don't see a lot of placements happening.
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WPR: And are you hopeful in this moment?
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Do you feel like we are making progress towards this?
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RB: It's early days.
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I'm hopeful.
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I feel good about the conversations that are happening.
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I'm seeing change in people thinking more about themselves
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when my white counterparts are questioning some of their actions.
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And so I feel like we can't let this moment leave us,
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and what we're learning about it.
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I think what I'm really optimistic about
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is that now I think more people will understand
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that the less diverse and less inclusive we are,
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it's more than a business imperative.
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When we combine the pandemic
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and we see the inequities of a pandemic
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on a diverse community,
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and we talk about how that happens,
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how people are underrepresented in health care,
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underrepresented in their housing,
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they can see that this is a groundswell moment.
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And the more we realize that and talk about that complexity,
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then the solutions begin to happen.
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And I think that's happening more and more,
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so I'm optimistic about that,
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because we're looking at the ills of lack of diversity and inclusion,
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and maybe looking at much broader solutions for it
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than what we have in the past.
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WPR: Thank you so much, Roz. This was such a meaningful conversation.
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It was great to hear your insights.
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RB: Thank you.
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