Homepage / Technology / How Silicon Valley can lose the 'frat house' image and get its act together
test Due Diligence Blog Digital Data Rooms for the Netherlands Board Room Apps Secure Board Management With Secure Board Portals What Happens at Board of Directors Meetings? Board Room Software Review How to Prepare Board Rooms for Effective Board Meetings Board Room Software Boosts Performance and Communication Selecting a Secure Data Room Review Local Data Room Service Review How to Find the Best Virtual Data Room Review What to Look for in a Data Room uk Provider Document Storage and Distribution Software Everything About VDRs Corporate Software Advantages How to Choose a Virtual Data Room Provider The Most Secure Way to Transfer Files How to Manage Online Board Meetings Benefits Virtual Data Room Solutions – Must-Haves for M&A and Due Diligence Best Data Room Functions for the Different Types of Industries How to Choose a VDR Software Provider How to Choose an Online Board Portal The Benefits of a Boardroom Review Board Room Online Solutions – How to Get the Most Out of Your Board Meetings Why You Need a Board Room How a Board Room Blog Can Transform Your Business Choosing the Best Board Room Format How to Have Productive and Engaging Board Directors Meetings Choosing the Right Virtual Data Room How to Keep Safe Documents Storage Teaching Kids About Online Safety Avoid Costly Mistakes With Free Data Room Services Corporate Virtual Data Secure Online Data Rooms Solutions How to Keep Share, Edit and Delete Your Data Safe Virtual Data Room Software Secrets for M&A Due Diligence What to Look For in Boardroom Providers Board of Directors Blog Posts How to Deliver Value at Your Board Meetings How to Have Effective Board Meetings Responsibilities of Board Members Deal Management – How to Effectively Manage a Complex Sales Pipeline Data Rooms For Mergers And Acquisitions How to Have a Successful Board Room Meeting Choosing a Board Room Service Provider What is a Board Room Service? Board Room Software Review – Choosing the Best Portal for Mother Board Meetings Why a Board Room Providers Review Is Important What Is a Board Room Review? Venture Software for VC Firms What Is an Assessment Report? The Importance of a Tech Audit Popular Business Applications What to Look For in a Data Room App What Are Business Applications? How to Choose a Virtual Data Room How to Plan a Data Room Review Coronavirus Guide What is a Virtual Data Room? What Is Data Science? What Is an Operating System? Turbotax Small Business Review How Online VDRs Are Used in M&A Deals Why Choose VDR Software? The Power of Business Software The Benefits of a Software Board Online Data Room Review The Importance of Tech Knowledge Improving Accuracy of Financial Data Online Business Records – How to Keep Your Online Business Records Accurate and Secure What is a Board Portal De? DealRoom Review – A Review of VDR Software M&A Due Diligence for Private Companies The Virtual Data Room Review Why Companies Use a Data Room Review to Facilitate M&A Transactions The Best File Sharing Services How Online VDRs Are Used in M&A Deals Best Virtual Data Room How to Choose a Best Board Room Provider Choosing a Data Room for Due Diligence What Is a Data Room Business Software? Best Data Room Providers Review Data Room Providers Review Mostbet Tr Resmî Web Sitesinde Giriş Ve Kayıt Olm Kumar Oynamak Için En Iyi Yerdir The Benefits of Cloud Data Services for Enterprises Online Data Room and SSL How to Build a Diverse Board of Directors Best Virtual Data Review A Data Room Service Review How Runn Makes Project Data Accessible, Accurate and Shareable Five Pillars of Information Protection The Importance of Online Business Reports Benefits of Colocation Services Virtual Data Rooms Guide Choosing a Business Virtual Data Room Choosing the Right VDR Service Review How to Conduct a Virtual Data Room Review Glory Online Casino Türkiye En Iyi Oyunları Ve Bahisleri Olan Kumarhane

Technology

How Silicon Valley can lose the 'frat house' image and get its act together

Microchips, disk drives, routers, the iPhone. Google, Facebook, Netflix, Airbnb. These are just some of the innovations and innovators rooted in Silicon Valley, a place where disruption is the rule.

If only all those big brains could figure out a way to stop Silicon Valley’s persistent sexism problem.

It’s ironic, disgusting and perplexing that Silicon Valley is home to a company smart enough to almost single-handedly launch the on-demand economy – aka the Uber Effect – while also dumb enough to allow a frat house culture that led to CEO Travis Kalanick stepping down in the wake of widespread allegations of sexism and sexual harassment.

Or the place where SoFi CEO Mike Cagney stepped down following claims of sexual harassment; Binary Capital partner Justin Caldbeck took an indefinite leave of absence after six women accused him of hitting on them while they were pitching him for potential investment; and where Google engineer James Damore was fired after circulating a memo that asserted women are less biologically inclined to work in tech-related fields.

And all of this was in 2017 alone. Things have gotten so out of hand that California State Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson in August introduced a bill that would add investors to a list of people – attorneys, landlords, teachers, physicians and other professionals – already prohibited from sexually harassing someone they work with.

The time is overdue for Silicon Valley’s power-brokers to step up and apply their transformational energies to solving the embarrassing issues that have been plaguing the tech sector.

Our tech industry has never been a fan of slow, evolutionary change. It shakes up the status quo. It takes risks. It embraces bold moves. And that is how it needs to act now in attacking the rampant sexism that has been making headlines around the world.

The first step in fixing this must be for the industry to admit it has a problem. Let’s be honest: For years, frat house culture and tech-bro behavior wasn’t just allowed in Silicon Valley but encouraged.

And then Silicon Valley leaders must take daring, decisive action to bring real change: Venture capital firms, boards and C-suites should set a goal of a 50-50 ratio between men and women, and work aggressively toward it.

People often compare the current male-dominated culture in Silicon Valley to the Wall Street boys clubs of the ’80s and ’90s. But it’s more than just an analogy. There’s a vicious cycle at work.

The finance world of today is still heavily male-dominated, and it often rewards a certain type of behavior over real qualifications. That finance world meets up with Silicon Valley through limited partnerships that fund venture capitalists. The VCs they fund are predominantly male. The founders the VCs fund are then mostly male. The VCs and the founders then create male-dominated boards (typically consisting of the VCs and the founders). The board and founders then hire management teams that, you guessed it, are largely male. From the management teams it then trickles down into the employee base.

The main reason cited for the lack of diversity at these senior positions is the mostly male “candidate pipeline.” I’ve been susceptible to this argument in the past as well, and I was wrong.

The reality is that there are more highly qualified female candidates than the male-dominated culture acknowledges. Plain and simple, too many women are being passed over.

VCs in particular need to end the chicken-and-egg game where they claim to aggressively look for women to bring in as partners but claim they can’t find enough women who have a proven track record for investing. Jenny Lefcourt, a partner at Freestyle Capital, writes convincingly that VCs are missing out on great talent and that it will soon become a disadvantage for any firm to not have a woman.

A move to a 50/50 model is not only the right thing to do, but it actually would be good for the business. Studies by McKinsey, Catalyst, Harvard Business Review, and others have shown that diverse management teams and diverse boards outperform their peers.

If 50/50 sounds overly ambitious, it’s been done before, Twenty years ago, 189 countries signed the Beijing Platform for Action, which called ongovernments to strive for gender balance in its leadership positions. Today, six countries have reached the threshold – Canada, France, Finland, Sweden, Lichtenstein and Cape Verde.

If national governments can meet such an objective, Silicon Valley can. Boards can be the catalysts for this change. How?

  1. Acknowledge the Maverick Rule to address the “pipeline” argument. In the movie “Top Gun,” Tom Cruise’s Maverick always had to do it “better and cleaner than the other guy” because he felt his family name gave him a disadvantage in the Navy. Superior performance is also how so many female execs have had to move through the ranks and defeat the boys club. At the SVP, VP and Director levels, the female execs I have worked with have been, for the most part, stronger than their peers. They have had to be. So we should recognize that there is a large pool of mid-to-senior level female execs ready to be called up.

  2. Change the rules. Companies need to loosen the policies that limit their female executives from participating on external boards. An immense pool of talented female executives currently sits at the VP/SVP/C-level across tech, but, unfortunately, too many companies have restrictive policies on allowing current execs to serve on external boards. My former employer, Salesforce is a great example of this. The company has more than 100 female executives. If they were each on two boards, then another 200 board seats at tech companies could be filled by cloud business experts of the highest caliber. And that’s just from one company.
  3. Expand VC partnerships to impact boards.VCs should expand their firms by bringing in more female partners, who will broaden their perspectives on investments while also improving the board diversity in their portfolio companies. There is a current trend at many VCs to bring in “operators” as general partners and not just finance professionals. In the short term, firms could also have female execs who are currently operators at other tech companies serve on boards in their seats, perhaps even as venture partners.

  4. Recognize that boards drive change. Adding qualified, female operators the makeup of boards would also be a catalyst for change in the composition of C-suites, as boards have a significant role in the hiring process at the top echelon. You can also imagine the network effect as boards and VCs think about filling open c-level positions or open partnership opportunities given the exposure provided by these 50/50 boards.

Silicon Valley should make the kind of big bet on women that it makes all the time on technology. Rejecting Silicon Valley’s male culture in favor of diversity and inclusion may be the most important disruption the Valley ever undertakes.

Can we make it happen?

Commentary by Andy MacMillan, CEO of Act-On Software, a marketing automation provider.

For more insight from CNBC contributors, follow @CNBCopinion on Twitter.

Source: Tech CNBC
How Silicon Valley can lose the 'frat house' image and get its act together

Comments are closed.