The powerful woman behind Intel's new $300 million diversity initiative
|
|
|
Posted By: How May I Help You NC on January 14, 2015 by Michal Lev-Ram @mlevram Intel president Renée James is building a pipeline of female and other groups of underrepresented engineers and computer scientists. Amidst the barrage of new TVs and connected fitness trackers unveiled at last week’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas came a surprising announcement from chipmaker Intel: a $300 million investment in training and recruiting female and other groups of under-represented computer scientists. “A confluence of industry events has brought [the lack of women and minorities in technology] to the center stage, from the threats and harassment that have characterized the debate in the gaming world to the publication of hiring data and diversity statistics in the tech industry,” Intel CEO Brian Krzanich told the audience during his keynote address at CES. “This is a highly relevant issue and one that we all need to address. I’m here to say tonight, it’s time to step up and do more. It’s not good enough to say we value diversity and then have our workplaces and our industry not reflect the full availability and talent pool of women and underrepresented minorities.” While Krzanich announced the newly-formed “Diversity in Technology” initiative, it’s Intel INTC 0.33% president Renée James who will be the one handling the day-to-day oversight of the investment. James, the highest-ranking woman in Intel’s history (and No. 21 on Fortune‘s Most Powerful Women list), has already been instrumental in the creation of a women’s network at the company. When she took over as president (and Krzanich got the top job as CEO) in 2013, she pushed to review a decade’s worth of diversity data and commissioned a new hiring program that incentivized managers to hire more women and minorities (like many technology companies, the vast majority of Intel’s workforce is white and male). “We looked at our numbers and said, ‘look, we’re not bad but the problem is we’re not good enough,'” James said in a phone interview with Fortune after last week’s announcement. “We were spending a lot of money just to stay flat, and we were attracting a lot of talent and also losing a lot of talent.” Intel’s plan, says James, is to use the money to help build a pipeline of female and underrepresented engineers and computer scientists. That includes funding programs that teach STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) to young people in underserved areas, collaborating with higher education institutions, investing in women and minority-owned companies and creating bolder hiring and retention incentives and programs to encourage diversity within Intel. The goal? To achieve “full representation” of women and minorities by 2020—a.k.a. employ a workforce that is more representative of actual demographics. “We have had people in place doing these things for a long time but we’re going to amp it up and we’ve made super aggressive goals,” said James. Another change James hopes to set in motion is to get the tech industry working together on some of these initiatives. Other companies, like Apple, have similar aspirations. But, at least publicly, it doesn’t look like many technology companies have formed any large-scale collaborations to tackle the lack of diversity in Silicon Valley. And despite the increasing number of companies choosing to reveal their diversity numbers via annual reports, there hasn’t been much—if any—improvement in recent years. Still, James is convinced that the increased transparency (and more importantly the money now being set aside and tech companies working together) will have an impact. “We decided to go public because we feel like this needs to be broader than Intel,” said James. “We need to get others on board so we really meet the objectives in the next five years.” Over the next few months, James and Rosalind Hudnell, Intel’s chief diversity officer, will not only figure out how to collaborate with other tech companies but also formalize the team that will be working on Intel’s own Diversity in Technology initiative. They will also determine which organizations they will partner with to help build out the pipeline of women and minorities with tech-job skills. For now, James says she is excited that the efforts are finally getting a voice—even if it is at CES (normally a launchpad for high-end refrigerators and new smartwatches, not for initiatives that hope to improve the lack of diversity in tech). “I wasn’t sure that CES was the right venue for this and then we decided there really wasn’t a right venue,” said James. “I didn’t know if it [CES] was the right place to talk about it. But it’s a big stage.” Source: http://fortune.com/ If you enjoyed this article, Join HBCU CONNECT today for similar content and opportunities via email! |
Comments
More From This Author
Latest Career Content
|
|
Spending time in a GARAGE Build it Guard it Design it Man Cave itHow many different types of Garages are under construction as we read?
👷🏽♂️Architects
“ How much does an Architectural Intern make in Columbus, Ohio?
As of Feb ...more
How May I Help You NC • 126 Views • February 12th, 2026 |
|
|
Unlock Your Entrepreneur Journey — NEXT GEN Info SessionDate & TimeTuesday, February 1710:00 AM PST / 12:00 PM CST / 1:00 PM ESTVirtual EventREGISTER HERE:https://events.teams.microsoft.com/event/a...Tuesday, March 1710:00 AM PST / 12:00 PM CST / 1:00 ...more
Laura Van Brackle Sims • 322 Views • February 9th, 2026 |
|
|
Love a little help from my friend: Stevie WonderCurator: Sami YenigunStevie Wonder needs little introduction. His awards and achievements — 25 Grammy Awards, a place in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, more than 100 million records sold worldwide — ...more
How May I Help You NC • 366 Views • February 9th, 2026 |
|
|
YouTube CEO — 4 Big Priorities for 2026 Neal Mohan@YouTube CEO @nealmohan talks with YouTube Liaison @ReneRitchie about his four big priorities for 2026, including:
⭐️ Reinventing entertainment: Cre ...more
How May I Help You NC • 443 Views • February 8th, 2026 |
Popular Career Content
|
|
PAID, federal internships with the Federal Diversity Internship Initiative!The Washington Center Federal Diversity Internship Initiative Now is your chance to apply for paid fall internships with the Federal Diversity Internship Initiative! This is your once-in-a-lifetime op ...more
Reginald Culpepper • 41,909 Views • June 14th, 2017 |
|
|
Today's Success Tip: Joachim de Posada says, Don't eat the marshmallow...yetWe were invited to the National Association of African Americans in Human Resource's reception held at the
Atlanta Marriott Marquis during the SHRM conference, and the gift/tip we walked away with w ...more
How May I Help You NC • 41,017 Views • June 29th, 2012 |


