Racial Equity Initiative
We are committed to helping address racial injustice and inequity in the US for Black and African American communities. The commitments we outlined in June 2020 are actions and progress we expect to make or exceed by 2025.
Strengthening our communities
We are using data, technology, and partnerships to help improve the lives of Black and African American people in the US, including our employees and their communities.
Increasing representation & strengthening inclusion
We are building on our momentum by adding a $150 million investment to strengthen inclusion and double the number of Black and African American, Hispanic, and Latinx leaders in the US by 2025.
Engaging our ecosystem
We are using our balance sheet and relationships with suppliers and partners to foster societal change and create new opportunity.
Learn more about our commitments
Engaging our ecosystem
A stronger, more productive ecosystem requires better representation of the diversity in our communities. We are evolving engagement with our supply chain, banking partners, and our partner ecosystem in this effort.
Broadening our work with suppliers
We are doubling the number of Black and African American-owned approved suppliers over the next three years, spending an incremental $500 million with those existing and new suppliers, and encouraging representation progress in our top 100 suppliers.
Investment in financial institutions
We are growing our portfolio investment with Black and African American-owned financial institutions and investing to increase funds in local communities, improve access to capital, increase skill development, and reduce technology gaps.
Partner investment
We are investing to increase the number of Black and African American owned partners in the US to improve access to capital, provide financing to support cash flow needs, and implement training programs.
Broadening our work with suppliers
We have achieved our goal of increasing spend with Black and African American-owned suppliers by $500 million with double the number of suppliers. The current macroeconomic environment has led to an overall reduction in the number of suppliers used and we recognize our work here is not done. We remain focused on growing our utilization of Black and African American-owned suppliers to sustain our progress and strengthen the relationships we’ve forged over the previous three years.
We’re continuing to encourage Black and African American representation progress in our top 100 suppliers, which account for a significant portion of our indirect spend, by requesting annual disclosure of their diversity profile information (e.g., workforce diversity) and supplier self-assessments. We now have 90 percent of these top 100 suppliers participating in a D&I self-assessment program. We have also made several enhancements to our supplier policies, sourcing processes, and tools. Specifically, we have digitally transformed our diversity certification validation process to accurately identify diverse-owned businesses for supplier diversity program benefits. We have also launched an online community to encourage best practice sharing and will continue to work closely with our top strategic suppliers to create additional opportunities in support our Black and African American-owned suppliers.
To ensure new suppliers are ready for business and receive adequate resources and support to be successful at Microsoft, we have implemented a program called AMP’D (Advocates, Mentors, Peers for Diverse Suppliers) that focuses on supplier mentorship, advocacy, development, and access to capital programs through our banking relationships. AMP’D pairs Black and African American-owned suppliers with an advocate in the business, a mentor and/or supplier peers to help suppliers easily connect and address the topics most important to their businesses.
We have launched a Microsoft-wide training program to drive awareness of inclusive buying decisions with specific actions employees can take to create a more equitable supplier ecosystem and drive our collective success.
Investment in financial institutions
We are using our own banking needs to grow our portfolio investment activity with Black and African American-owned financial institutions. In June of 2020, we committed to double the percentage of our transaction volumes through these institutions by 2023. Three years later, we have exceeded our goal by more than double prior levels from 2020. In addition, we are increasing investment activity with Black and African American-owned asset managers, which now represent 45 percent of our external manager group.
We have also met our goal of creating a $100 million program focused on mission-driven banks. Since then, we have made investments focused on strengthening these institutions–directly enabling them to deploy increased capital in local communities. For example, we have committed to the Mission-Driven Bank Fund as an anchor investor in collaboration with the FDIC to target Minority Owned Depository Institutions (MDIs), which directly enables an increase of funds into local community businesses, restaurants, housing, etc. We invested in the Southern Opportunity and Resilience Fund aimed at helping small businesses and nonprofits in southern and southeastern states with less than 50 employees navigate and rebuild from the COVID-19 health and economic crisis. We also invested in the Entrepreneur Backed Asset Fund investment to increase capital to MDIs and Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs).
Additionally, we have accomplished our $50 million commitment to create an investment fund focused on supporting Black and African American-owned small businesses. The fund focuses on investing to improve access to capital, increasing skill development, and reducing the technology gaps that exist today. Some of these investments include:
- Clear Vision Impact Fund investment with Siebert Williams Shank, created to mitigate deficits in capital access that minority-owned businesses often encounter and to enhance the positive impact that these companies have on the communities in which they operate.
- Investment in the Morgan Stanley Next Level Fund, which primarily focuses on early-stage technology and technology-enabled companies with diverse or women members as part of the founding team.
- Investment in BlackRock Liquid Federal Trust Fund (BLFT) created in partnership with the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, which uses a portion of its revenue to fund scholarships at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs).
Partner investment
Partners are vital to ecosystem growth and transformation, which is why we’ve continued our investments to increase the number of Black and African American-owned partners in our US partner community. Since June 2020, the number of identified Black and African American partners has increased by more than 250 percent, surpassing our initial growth goal of 20 percent by 2023.
In addition to rapid growth in Black and African American-owned technology partners in the Microsoft Partner Network, we have also built active partnerships with technology communities such as Black Women Talk Tech, Black is Tech, Black Men in Tech, and Black and Brown Founders and have sponsored and participated in conference opportunities. Currently, we are building longer term future partnerships with these organizations to share how Microsoft supports partners and founders and works collaboratively to support Black and African American-owned business growth.
The Black Partner Growth Initiative (BPGI) has evolved as an umbrella portfolio of programs and projects to reach, recruit, support, and learn from Black and African American–owned businesses who become partners in the Microsoft ecosystem. We have also recognized the necessity of providing access to capital, cashflow support, and business training. We continue to invest in training programs covering financial management, tech solutions, and go-to-market readiness for Black partners.
We are working towards the following program investments, currently as pilots:
- We are helping Black and African American-owned partners leverage our $50 million general partner fund that helps with access to capital and providing loans to support partners through their startup phase, with the loans recovered over time as their business grows.
- A $20 million financing program for existing and new Black and African American partners to support their cashflow needs.
Along with these programs, we are continuing to invest in areas where Black and African American partners are creating impact for the business community. We are accomplishing this through strategic relationships such as the Black Channel Partner Alliance (BCPA): an economic empowerment initiative founded by and for Black and African American partners to deepen partner-to-partner relationships, expand development opportunities, provide business mentorship/coaching, and fuel inclusive community growth. This partnership has successfully supported growth in revenue, contracts, and the number of new hires for partners registered with the BCPA.
New ideas and energized employees fuel ongoing efforts toward racial equity
Explore some of the ways Microsoft employees who are focused on efforts towards racial equity share their stories and ideas.
Engaging globally in critical conversations
We regularly engage with some of the top minds in academia, law, social justice, and human behavior, who speak to how we can create a culture of inclusion and enable audiences to learn about the community from the community. We share these critical global conversations, along with learning content and employee stories, to continue our commitment to help accelerate diversity & inclusion across our ecosystem.
Microsoft 2022 D&I data disclosure and report
Understand our progress on increasing representation and strengthening a culture of inclusion.
How Black-owned companies are using corporate connections to give back
Explore our latest update and the story of three business owners making an impact on their communities through partnership and investment.
Impact investing for more diversity in business ownership
Microsoft’s partnership with First Women’s Bank supports efforts to close the gender lending gap and create opportunities that have community impact.
Mapping a Path to Community Impact
The Nonprofit Tech Acceleration (NTA) for Black and African American Communities supplies digital technology resources and free consulting to support local nonprofits in the US making a difference in the lives of Black American people.
Celebrating Black and African American entrepreneurs
Nonprofit leaders from cities across the US are helping to make sure each industry ‘looks like America’.
Microsoft Black Partner Growth Initiative
The Microsoft Black Partner Growth Initiative is dedicated to providing access to a global community, technical enablement, and key resources available through the Microsoft Partner Network.
Diversity & Inclusion
For press information:
Microsoft Media Relations, WE Communications, (425) 638-7777, rrt@we-worldwide.com