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Best Buy to Commit $44 Million to Diversity Hiring

Best Buy is announcing actions to better address underrepresentation, technology inequities and educational and career opportunities for those who need it most.

According the the press release;

In June, Best Buy CEO Corie Barry said we will do better. As a company, we committed to making systemic, permanent changes that address social injustices to improve our company and our communities.

We have spent the last several months making plans for how we can make meaningful impacts, including setting major company goals to address how we recruit, hire and retain our employees, and how we’re expanding opportunities for youth across the country.

“We know it’s incredibly important to our employees, customers and communities to show that we are committed to doing all we can to further economic and social justice,” Corie said. “In many ways, we have engaged in these issues for years — but now we’re being bold about our commitments to hold ourselves accountable for this work we’ve promised to do.”

CEO Corie Barry

We are now ready and proud to share these goals we aim to achieve by 2025:

How we will do this

To expand representation throughout the company, we are providing leadership-in-training roles to BIPOC and women employees. We will also invest in mentorship opportunities and match all BIPOC directors and officers with sponsors and coaches to enhance the employee experience, increase retention, and help our current and future leaders create meaningful connections.

Within the communities we serve, we will intensify our focus on disinvested populations and communities by partnering with BIPOC-serving organizations for new Teen Tech Centers across the country so youth can learn new skills, nurture positive adult and peer relationships, and discover future careers. We will also pilot a rural Teen Tech Center model to address the unique needs of geographically isolated communities.

To support youth after their high school careers, we are increasing post-secondary support at our Teen Tech Centers, including trained guidance counselors and financial aid navigators. And because not everyone’s career path looks the same, we will also partner with community colleges, credential programs and tech bootcamps to create opportunities for teens to explore all types of post-secondary options that will prepare them for future success.

Other company actions

Best Buy’s purpose is to enrich lives through technology, and we know we can’t do that without our employees. Our goal is to foster an inclusive company culture that embraces our differences and fosters an environment where employees can bring their whole selves to work. ​​

One way we’re fostering an inclusive culture for our employees is by investing in learning opportunities and personal development programs to support their career journeys.

We have created a network of Inclusion and Diversity Steering Committees (IDSCs), cross-functional groups of leaders that focus on attracting and investing in top talent and fostering an inclusive workplace. We also have Employee Resource Groups (ERGs) that bring employees with shared life experiences or characteristics together to focus on recruitment and advancement of underrepresented employee populations.

Additionally, we are continuing to move forward with our Task Force for Racial Equity, which we formed in June with the intent to drive constructive enterprise-wide change. That task force, made up of 19 employees from across the company, is bringing forward even more actions for Best Buy to take. This includes addressing issues such as the career development and advancement of BIPOC employees and how the company is supporting BIPOC tech businesses.

Other recent actions include:

During the pandemic, we took action to ensure teens from disinvested communities across the country had the technology they needed to participate in distance learning. One of our very first moves was to outfit 2,500 teens from our 35 Teen Tech Centers with a home computer and internet to attend school virtually. And many of our Teen Tech Centers opened to provide safe centers for local students to complete schoolwork, get meals, access mental health counseling, and stay connected to caring adults.

We also co-founded Partnership for ConnectedMN, a public-private initiative that brought together local businesses, community leaders and the State of Minnesota to provide internet and technology devices to an estimated 68,000 students and families to date across the state who didn’t have access.

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