Amazon's leadership team remains short on diversity

By Benjamin Romano, Seattle Times

February 11, 2020 at 11:58PM
Employees walk through a lobby at Amazon's headquarters Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2018, in Seattle. Amazon, which is growing too big for its Seattle hometown, is spreading out to the East Coast. The online shopping giant ended its 14-month-long competition for a second headquarters Tuesday by selecting New York and Arlington, Va., as the joint winners. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson) ORG XMIT: WAET102
Amazon’s leadership team remains less diverse than the company as a whole. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Amazon last year made seven new additions — including two women — to its senior leadership team, the upper echelon of the company, which meets regularly with Chief Executive Jeff Bezos to set goals and strategy for the Seattle-based tech and commerce giant.

Two longtime executives also left the so-called S Team going into 2020.

Even with the changes, the S Team remains less diverse than Amazon as a whole, though the recent additions reduced that disparity somewhat.

Colleen Aubrey, vice president of performance advertising, and Christine Beauchamp, vice president of Amazon fashion, joined senior vice president of human resources Beth Galetti, who had been the only woman on the S Team.

In 2018, nearly 42% of the company's global workforce identified as women, according to Amazon's most recent disclosures

Nineteen of the 22 S Team members, or 86%, are white. Among the company's U.S. workforce, nearly 39% identified as white, while management ranks were nearly 62% white at the end of 2018. The company said earlier this year it now has more than 500,000 employees in the U.S.

With the new additions, the group has shifted a bit younger. The average age of S Team members now is 51, down from 53. The average Amazon tenure of the group is nearly 16 years, down from more than 18.

Ivy League universities are heavily represented on the S Team: Five individuals, including Bezos, were undergraduates at Princeton, while Harvard, Columbia, Yale, Dartmouth and other elite institutions such as Stanford, University of California, Berkeley, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology can each claim at least one alumni currently on the S Team.

At least 15 members majored as undergraduates in a STEM field — science, technology, engineering or math — and more than half earned MBAs or other graduate business degrees, though not everyone focused their studies on business or STEM.

The lack of diversity among at the top of Amazon, and wider tech industry, has been criticized for years. Amazon's 10-person board of directors added two women of color.

about the writer

about the writer

Benjamin Romano, Seattle Times

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