When Jessica Cooper moved back to the L.A. area from Washington, D.C., and got a job at the Santa Monica tech company PatientPop, she was shocked at how white the company â and the companyâs leadership â was.
At the Federal Communications Commission, where she had worked in IT, Cooper said, she never felt isolated in her workplace. âNow that Iâve come back home, and working in the tech industry specifically,â Cooper said, âthe higher up the ladder you look, you donât see a lot of women, and you mostly see white males.â On her team, sheâs the only Black woman out of 25 employees. The companyâs C-suite consists of four white men and one white woman, and the broader leadership includes just one Black executive.
Starting in the summer of 2019, she and her co-workers formed a group to advocate for more diversity and inclusion at the company. Sheâs grateful that the company has let them do that work on company time, but the last six months had been frustrating, she said.
âI was hopeful at that time,â when she started the group, she said, âbut between that time and when the world changed as we know it, there was this frustration, because as much as we felt like weâre fighting for change it seems like business was really prioritized over that.â
âFor people who donât see a need for this, theyâre like, âNo, letâs just keep making money,ââ she added. âThe wheels are oiled, so letâs keep going.â
But things are beginning to change. After the killing of Floyd and the spread of protests around the country, sheâs been pleasantly surprised to see the reaction from her companyâs C-suite. Although they were a little slow to move at first, she said, theyâve been working with employees like her to actively hammer out new processes and policies.
The company, which provides online services to medical practices, has seen a decrease in revenue from the COVID-19 crisis, and announced layoffs in early April. Thatâs put a damper on the potential for change, Cooper said, and has made her groupâs core demand of hiring a full-time diversity-and-inclusion executive unlikely to succeed. But the company has been willing to move on a number of changes, such as allowing staff to observe a wider range of significant holidays, and broadening the companyâs policy against discrimination and harassment to extend beyond working hours to all interactions between employees.
âWe realize weâre in a recession, and COVID is still going on,â Cooper said. âBut Iâm trying to seize the opportunity to get as much accomplished as possible.â
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Google, Pinterest and Snap all declined to comment on the accounts offered here by former employees.