Racial Equity Initiative
Our commitments
Strengthening our communities
Increasing representation & strengthening inclusion
Engaging our ecosystem
Our latest reports
Learn more about our commitment to diversity and inclusion and progress working toward long-term systemic change.
Read the 2024 Global Diversity & Inclusion Report Read Racial Equity Initiative's 4-year Fact Sheet
Learn more about our commitments
Skills and education
Nonprofits
Broadband connectivity
Justice reform
Progress to date
Skills and education
Our Technology Education and Learning Support (TEALS) program is providing computer science education to high school students in nearly 600 schools across 21 racial equity expansion regions with the support of nearly 1,500+ volunteers, 12 percent of whom identify as Black or African American. TEALS grew our support of AI classes in all racial equity expansion regions by 50 percent in just one year since introducing TEALS-supported AI courses last school year.
To date, we have contributed nearly $16M benefitting 32 HBCUs, Hispanic-serving (HSIs) institutions, and higher education associations to support curriculum development, faculty training, student scholarship and mentoring, and research capacity building. In partnership with Stillman College and Black Tech Futures Research Institute we advised the National Science Foundation on a framework for equitable AI and responsible computing funds. We initiated a faculty cohort representing eight HBCUs and HSIs as part of the Accelerate Foundation Models Research (AFMR) to broaden participation in AI research, complementing our corporate support of the President’s Executive Order on the Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence.
Nonprofits
To empower digital transformation for nonprofits that help Black and African American communities, our Nonprofit Tech Acceleration program has helped more than 3,000 local organizations in close to 1,900 Black and African American communities use technical solutions to modernize and streamline operations. Through this program, nonprofits have received over $35M in granted licenses to Microsoft 365, Power Platform and Azure to better improve their operations and better engage their beneficiaries.
Broadband connectivity
Our partnerships and projects drive adoption of affordable broadband services, computing devices, and digital literacy across 14 geographies—Atlanta, Baltimore, Birmingham, Charlotte, Cleveland, Detroit, El Paso, Los Angeles, Memphis, Milwaukee, New York and rural Alabama, North Carolina, and Virginia.
Our approach centers on empowering communities to drive broadband adoption by establishing partnerships to increase access to affordable broadband, devices, and foundational digital skilling resources in communities.
Our partnership with EveryoneOn continued to spread the word on low-cost internet offerings in cities across the country through their online locator tool. Their digital literacy train-the-trainer classes conducted throughout our REI footprint focused on both foundational and workforce training skills. Results from our partnership informed EveryoneOn’s research on women engaging in digital literacy and skills training conducted in collaboration with the Benton Marjorie & Charles Benton Opportunity Fund.
One of the barriers to broadband adoption is the lack of affordable computing devices. Our partnerships with PCs for People and HumanIT have resulted in over 100,000 refurbished devices distributed nationwide in income insecure communities.
With unprecedented investments in infrastructure and internet skilling programs at the federal, state, and local levels, our partners have secured over $160M in funding for projects that address the digital divide. Airband partner DigitalC, a nonprofit internet service provider in Cleveland, Ohio, secured $53 million in city, state, and philanthropic funding aligned with the Ohio Governor DeWine’s commitment to closing the digital divide and Cleveland Mayor Bibb’s Rescue & Transformation Plan to design and deploy a city-wide broadband network. Most recently, the County of Los Angeles' Internal Services Department awarded our partner, WeLink, $45M to expand their affordable broadband network in underserved communities in Los Angeles. WeLink will provide communities in South and East Los Angeles with robust broadband service at 500/500 Mbps speeds, starting at $25 per month for eligible low-income households.
Justice reform
In June 2020, we committed $50 million over five years to strengthen and expand our existing Justice Reform Initiative. To date, we’ve established more than 170 distinct partnerships with more than 130 unique organizations, working to provide alternatives to incarceration, accelerate innovative models of public safety, and expand access to data-driven insights. Together, these organizations have improved access to data-driven insights in more than 230 different cities across the US, which led to implementation policy or practice changes in many of these communities.
As part of our commitment to expanding access to data-driven insights, for example, we support Prosecutorial Performance Indicators which is working with eight District Attorney’s offices in Colorado to help identify opportunities to proactively reduce racial and ethnic disparities.
Other recent practice changes include:
Atlanta Policing Alternatives and Diversion (PAD) using Power BI to ingest and analyze data from 911 and 311 calls which resulted in more calls being routed to community responders as an alternative to police response.
Forward Justice, in North Carolina, collected police traffic stop data and made it accessible to the public. The resulting analyses and findings prompted the Mecklenburg County Sheriff to end traffic stops for certain minor non-moving violations.
Culture of inclusion
Career planning and talent development
Accountability for progress
Progress to date
Culture of inclusion
Strengthening a culture of inclusion is about a company-wide, sustained focus on understanding and practicing the behaviors that can improve the lived experience for all employees at Microsoft. Shared language and shared understanding go a long way in building the foundation for those culture shifts.
As June 30, 2024, the average Microsoft employee completion rate was 98 percent overall for required D&I learning courses on allyship, covering, privilege, and unconscious bias in the workplace.
The Race and Ethnicity Learning Pathway was introduced as a personalized, voluntary learning experience enabling employees to take ownership of their D&I learning journey. We also launched the Informed Allies Learning Pathway, which provokes moments of reflection, activation of basic inclusive behaviors, and drives commitment to action. Most recently, we added new interactive D&I Simulations where learners can practice skills acquired through other Microsoft D&I learning solutions.
Microsoft’s Inclusion is Innovation site conveys our unwavering commitment to directly address the systemic and cultural complexity of diversity and inclusion by showcasing the impact employees have when they can thrive.
Additionally, Microsoft’s Inclusion Journey site features learning courses and thought leadership videos from external experts who speak to how we can leverage our resources. This is to help accelerate diversity & inclusion across our ecosystem and create a culture of inclusion for our employees.
Career planning and talent development
Microsoft supports legal practices throughout our talent motions that help build workforces with a range of backgrounds, skills, and experiences, foster innovation, and serve business and customer needs.
We are unwavering in our efforts toward advancing representation at all levels, and it is even more critical now that we prioritize internal development and growth. Growing global networks, enhancing business acumen, building skills, and developing leadership have never been more important. With that in mind, we’re continuing to invest in programs internally and partnerships externally that give employees and their managers a variety of options throughout their careers to learn and explore across professional opportunities.
Aligned to our commitment to ensure equitable access to opportunity, part of our work is to provide robust and holistic leadership development options available to Microsoft employees. These opportunities help deepen understanding of career options and pathways, supported by managers who are invested in the success of all employees thriving at Microsoft.
To accelerate progress, we are providing external D&I coaches to executives. Since the initial coaching pilot was completed in FY21, more than 175 executives have participated in this program to date with more planned.
We are focused on enhancing the hiring and interview processes to include discussions on both culture and inclusion for management positions and employee hiring broadly. We launched an updated Inclusive Hiring Training available to interviewers and all hiring managers.
Accountability for progress
The 2024 Diversity & Inclusion Report marks the 11th year publicly releasing our workforce data, we continue that long-standing commitment to the hiring, development, internal movement, and retention of a workforce that reflects the world, as well as our investment in a workplace culture where everyone can thrive.
Increasing representation and strengthening a culture of inclusion require ongoing investments and learnings, which accrue over time. Over the last four years, Microsoft has increased representation across demographics and levels, making progress toward fulfilling our overall commitment to double the number of Black and African American and Hispanic and Latinx leaders in the US by 2025.
As of June 30, 2024, we are 63 percent of the way to our goal for Black and African American people managers (below director level) and 128.7 percent the way for Black and African American directors+ (people managers and individual contributors). We are 4.3 percent of the way to our goal for Hispanic and Latinx people managers (below director level) and 95.7 percent of the way for Hispanic and Latinx directors+ (people managers and individual contributors).
Our progress on growing director+ representation is meaningful and driven by ongoing intentional efforts: investments in leadership development programs, key talent management motions, and a focus on career development by managers across the company. We also recognize there is more work to be done, particularly below the director level. Our commitment continues to be advancing representation at all levels. Increasing representation and strengthening a culture of inclusion require ongoing investments and learnings, which accrue over time. What we’ve learned over the past four years, combined with our decades of work in this space, will allow us to make meaningful progress into the future.
Through our company-wide One Microsoft Diversity & Inclusion Plan, we are amplifying, accelerating, and activating a diverse and inclusive workplace. The Plan outlines priorities and company-wide expectations for all employees, managers, and executives, enabling action for impact across our geographies and organizations and holding us accountable to our commitments. What we’ve learned over the past four years, combined with our decades of work in this space, will allow us to make meaningful progress into the future. At Microsoft, diversity and inclusion are core to our mission and critical to innovation.
Broadening our work with suppliers
Investment in financial institutions
Partner investment
Progress to date
Broadening our work with suppliers
We recognize our work here is not done, and we remain focused on growing our utilization of diverse-owned suppliers to sustain our progress and strengthen the relationships we’ve forged.
We continue to encourage diversity, equity, and inclusion progress amongst our top strategic suppliers. We’ve done this by launching an online community and facilitating fireside chats that encourage best practice sharing amongst these suppliers while continuing to work closely with them to create opportunities in support of diverse-owned businesses.
In 2021, to ensure our new suppliers have the tools, resources, and support to be successful at Microsoft, we 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. Since then, AMP’D has evolved to encompass a wider range of diverse groups and has established the foundation for new programs designed to meet the changing needs of our suppliers and business.
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, which we exceeded. In addition, we have increased investment activity with Black and African American-owned asset managers.
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 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 Scale Link (formerly Entrepreneur Backed Assets (EBA) Fund) 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 enhance the positive impact that these companies have on their communities
- 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
- 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 continue to cultivate growth by fostering partnerships, increasing partner knowledge of how to utilize Microsoft resources and benefits, and enabling partners to accelerate their revenue. In alignment with Microsoft mission, vision, and values, we amplify diverse partner voices through community efforts.
The Black Partner Growth Initiative (BPGI) has evolved as an initiative to recruit, support, and enable Black and African American-owned businesses who become Microsoft partners. Through community engagement, the initiative now includes approximately 1,600 partners, up from 324 partners since inception. We continue to invest in training programs covering financial management, AI, and go-to-market readiness for Black partners.
We maintain active partnerships and have sponsored and participated in opportunities to enable partner growth. We continue to scale our Partner Capital Fund, having provided 168 low-or no-interest loans totaling $50M so far to small-to-medium-sized businesses (SMB) with PNC, three Black and African American-owned Depository Institutions (Citizens Trust Bank, Liberty Bank and Trust, Carver Federal Bank), and one Black and African American-led credit union (Verity Credit Union).
Currently, we are building longer term future partnerships to share how Microsoft supports partners and works collaboratively to support partner business growth.
It takes all of us
Mapping a Path to Community Impact
Engaging globally in critical conversations
News and stories
To empower everyone, we must include everyone
How Black-owned companies are using corporate connections to give back
Impact investing for more diversity in business ownership
Pursuing justice through data and insights
Celebrating Black and African American entrepreneurs
Microsoft Black Partner Growth Initiative
Additional resources
Diversity & Inclusion
Racial Equity Initiative programs
Racial Equity Initiative reports
For press information:
Microsoft Media Relations, WE Communications, (425) 638-7777, rrt@we-worldwide.com