The inclusion revolution in leadership: Changing who leads will transform how we do business - New Leadership Playbook

Stay Updated

Sign up for our newsletter for updates, events and more.

The inclusion revolution in leadership: Changing who leads will transform how we do business


Halla Tómasdóttir, CEO of The B Team


April 28, 2021

We must disrupt the crisis of conformity — with diversity from top to bottom — if we hope to ensure a better way of doing business that values people and planet alongside profit.

—Halla Tómasdóttir

The disproportionate toll the COVID-19 pandemic has taken on women and people of color is undeniable. In one year, women across major economies were 24% more likely to lose their jobs than men. In one month (December 2020), women accounted for every net reported job loss in the United States — with Black and Latina women bearing the overwhelming brunt of these losses. Global GDP could suffer $1 trillion in losses by 2030 if nothing is done to address the pandemic’s regressive effects on women’s employment alone. In addition, the past year has opened more eyes to the climate crisis, heightened inequality and failures of governance in emergency response — all of which hit society’s most marginalized the hardest while elevating risk for business and governments alike.

CEOs must recognize that these are not sector-specific risks. Every business will be affected. Every business must be ready to respond. Leadership teams that reflect the diversity of our communities and our world are the ones best fit for the future — and best equipped to respond in ways that safeguard their business interests.

But a crisis of conformity still plagues C-suites and boardrooms around the world. Nearly 90% of Fortune 500 CEOs are white men, a staggering figure. Only one is a Black woman (though there will be a second when Thasunda Brown Duckett becomes CEO of TIAA on May 1). Globally, women occupy a mere one in five seats in the boardroom.

Read the full commentary in FORTUNE