Most employees think their companies are guilty of performative allyship

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Most of us know the drill. There's a national tragedy that directly impacts Black people. Or immigrants. Women. People who identify as LGBTQ+. Asian-Americans. Fill-in-the-blank ethnic or minority group. The event is covered by media outlets across the country, and social media timelines fill up with hot takes and strong opinions. Then one by one, the companies where we spend our money and that employ us release carefully crafted statements reassuring employees and consumers that they're thinking of us and on our side.

What follows is often a vague commitment to do better and the introduction of new policies or benefits that fall in line with trends across the corporate landscape—listening sessions, diversity days, hiring DEI professionals, and adopting slogans like #BlackLivesMatter or rainbow-treated logos.

In and of themselves, these actions that companies take aren't bad. But when executives don't go any further—they don't analyze the internal structures that breed inequality, don't consider how they are complicit, don't turn the magnifying glass on their own employees and invest real resources to support newly launched diversity programs—they are guilty of performative allyship.

In a recent Catalyst survey of roughly 7,000 people across 14 countries, 75% of employees reported that they didn't believe their organization's racial equity policies were genuine.

In 2020, U.S. companies promised to spend a combined $60 billion on racial equity initiatives following the murder of George Floyd, according to a report on the survey findings by authors Tara Van Bommel, Kathrina Robotham, and Danielle M. Jackson. By 2021 companies had shelled out just $250 million.

"It’s not enough to announce policies or issue statements. Your organization must follow through and take meaningful action," the authors wrote in the report. "Our data show that employees are savvy and recognize when company policies are merely performative—and when that is the conclusion they reach, there are consequences for organizations."

There are no quick fixes

Amid the global reckoning on race in 2020, many major companies were quick to denounce racism, release statements declaring support for their employees, and add diversity, equity, and inclusion executives to the payroll. But next steps were often not clear, if they existed at all.

This isn't a matter of the issues at hand being too big to solve, says Ericka Brownlee-Keller, a DEI professional based in Washington, D.C. "The problem is no one knows what to do."