Meta

Embracing Change Through Inclusion: Meta’s 2022 Diversity Report

Takeaways

  • In the past year, we’ve seen that candidates who accepted remote job offers were more often underrepresented people.
  • Since 2019, we’ve doubled the number of women in our global workforce and the number of Black and Hispanic employees in the US.
  • In 2021, we exceeded our diverse supplier commitment, spending $1.26 billion with US certified diverse suppliers and more than $306 million with Black-owned businesses in the US.

Since 2014, we’ve publically reported our diversity metrics and shared our plans to better support underrepresented people in our workforce and through our products. Today, we’re releasing our 2022 Annual Diversity Report and sharing highlights below. We’re also sharing how we’re putting diversity, equity and inclusion at the forefront of our work toward the metaverse by building products with people from diverse backgrounds and perspectives. Read the full report.

 

The Impact of Remote Work on Diversity

 

We’ve shifted our approach to work, and now, working at Meta isn’t limited by geography — approximately 75% of teams at Meta are working across multiple locations.

 

 

For the first time, we’re hiring individuals who are fully remote and working from locations where we don’t have offices, increasing the diversity of our candidate pool and workforce.

 

Over the past year, we’ve seen that: 

It’s not only about getting people in the door – it’s about making sure they can thrive at Meta, which is why we’re continuing to empower our employees with flexibility and benefits that match their evolving needs.

 

Inclusive Innovation for the Metaverse

 

 

We’re collaborating with diverse companies, developers, experts and policymakers to build the metaverse — the next generation of digital experiences — with diversity, equity and inclusion from the start. For example:

 

Our Workforce and Leadership Diversity Continue to Grow

 

In 2019 and 2020, we set ambitious five-year goals to increase representation in our workforce, and the latest numbers reflect meaningful progress.

 

Beyond our 50-in-5 and 30-in-5 goals, we continue to increase the number of women in leadership roles. Women now represent 36.7% of our global leadership.

Joining the Billion Dollar Roundtable

 

We’re also leveraging our resources and global reach to promote economic opportunity with initiatives like our Supplier Diversity program. In 2020, we announced our commitment to annually spend $1 billion with US diverse suppliers and at least $100 million with Black-owned businesses. In 2021, we spent $1.26 billion with US diverse suppliers and $306 million with Black-owned businesses — surpassing our commitment and nearly doubling the previous year’s amount. Next month, we will join the Billion Dollar Roundtable (BDR), a small group of companies that annually spend at least $1 billion with certified minority, women, veteran, LGBTQ+ and people with disability-owned businesses. Of BDR members, we are one of the fastest to ever reach $1 billion spent.

 

By supporting diverse suppliers and hiring people with a variety of backgrounds and perspectives, we’re able to create better experiences for everyone. We’ll continue to develop a more diverse and equitable workforce, but we know this work is far from finished. Together, through dedication and innovation, we’ll strive to make technology and the metaverse more inclusive.