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Citi Says Hiring Black Talent Not Enough, Retention is Challenge

Jennifer Surane

07/09/2020

Citigroup Inc. Chief Executive Officer Mike Corbat said it won’t be enough for banks to hire more Black workers. Firms have to give them more reasons not to leave.

“In many ways, bringing people in is the easy part,” Corbat said at a virtual conference his bank hosted this week. “The real question and the real challenge is around retention and how we manage people’s careers.”

Corbat said he reviews hiring practices with executives at least quarterly. Citigroup has said it will increase Black representation in roles from assistant vice president to managing director to at least 8% in the U.S. by next year from 6% in 2018.

Read more: Citigroup has a three-year plan to reverse its falling diversity

Citigroup has been vocal in opposing systemic racism, with the firm creating a task force that will identify how the bank’s core businesses address inequality. Chief Financial Officer Mark Mason wrote a blog post in response to the killing of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police officers, an incident that has sparked public outrage and protests nationwide.

“Black talent wants to see other Black talent. Black talent wants to know in the firms that they’re working that they’re treated fairly and equally,” Corbat said. “If we really go out today and hire a bunch of Black talent and we don’t nurture them, we don’t guide them, they don’t have role models -- they’re not going to stay.

This article originally appeared on Bloomberg

    Company Culture
    Gender Equity/Diversity
    Racial Equity/Diversity
    Leadership

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09

July 2020

Citi Says Hiring Black Talent Not Enough, Retention is Challenge

12

September 2020

First female chief executive for a Wall St bank chosen

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