Facebook's new-graduate hires help diversify workforce

Firm has made strides in increasing the percentage of women employees over the past year

Yoree Koh | The Wall Street Journal 

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People look at the Facebook wall at their office in New York. (Photo: Reuters)

Inc said its efforts to diversify its are starting to bear fruit, thanks in part to an effort to hire more straight out of college.
 
The has made strides in increasing the percentage of at the company over the past year. now account for 35% of global employees, up from 33% the previous year, said Wednesday. In technical roles—positions where there are typically the fewest female, black and Hispanic employees—the percentage of has increased from 17% to 19%.

 
said 27% of all new-graduate hires in engineering were That outpaced the 18% of computer-science graduates who are women, said Maxine Williams, Facebook’s head of diversity, citing a statistic from the National Center of Education Statistics.
 
“I’m happy with the trends, I’m feeling good about the growth, but I want more,” Ms. Williams said.
 
Facebook, like its tech peers, has struggled to make its more diverse, which experts say is key to producing technology adapted for a wide variety of audiences. Experts say there are several causes for the homogeneity, from the universities tend to favor recruiting from, to the referral programs that limit potential candidates to a narrow network of friends that typically come from similar backgrounds.
 
Ms. Williams said there are also systemic issues at play. While the company can take steps to improve its process and try to reduce unconscious bias, she attributed problems to the pipeline issue, referring to the pool of candidates available to hire.
 
“The pipeline is not everything, but it’s part of the issue,” she said.
 
Overall, Facebook’s still looks overwhelmingly white, Asian and male.
 
The percentage of black and Hispanic workers at the company in the U.S. ticked up 1 percentage point each to 3% and 5%, respectively. But their presence in technical roles and senior leadership roles didn’t budge in the past year. For technical roles in the U.S., Black still only account for 1% of workers and Hispanic account for 3 per cent.
 
She attributes the progress, such as accounting for 21% of all new technical hires, to efforts such as the company’s implementation of the Rooney Rule, where managers consider candidates from underrepresented backgrounds when filling positions. declined to disclose comparable figures for other minority groups.