General Mills said Wednesday it will double the number of Black managers throughout the company, making a public commitment after the police killing of George Floyd thrust more attention on racial injustice and inequality.
The food company's plan, announced Wednesday, reflects a larger reckoning in corporate America over the lack of diverse representation in upper management.
Additionally, the company — founded in Minneapolis, and now based in Golden Valley — promised to increase the percentage of racially and ethnically diverse individuals holding professional positions within the company's U.S. offices, currently at 19%, to 25%. It said it will diversify its supply base by doubling what it spends with minority-owned vendors.
Floyd's death and subsequent protests raised awareness of the ways Black Americans are disadvantaged and discriminated against, including economically and professionally. This has led to calls for greater, and quantifiable, representation in boardrooms and senior corporate leadership.
"I want to voice General Mills' strong support for the inspiring movement for social and racial justice that was tragically elevated by the horrible killing of George Floyd here in our hometown of Minneapolis," General Mills' chief executive, Jeff Harmening, told investors earlier this summer.
"We have a lot of work to do to start the healing, to help our communities rebuild, to emphasize that Black lives matter, and to help drive lasting change for social and racial justice," he added.
And while General Mills has set a tangible goal, it stopped short of establishing a deadline by which to meet these commitments.
"It is an ongoing commitment that includes how we recruit, develop and advance, and retain employees," a company spokeswoman said. "We will continue to establish and pursue tangible goals that ensure we build and maintain a diverse workforce."