Building a More Inclusive Startup: Introducing the Diversity Dashboard

Jun 24, 2015 3 min readOpen
Photo of Courtney Seiter
Courtney Seiter

Former Director of People @ Buffer

“What gets measured, gets managed.”

This well-known quote is often applied to business situations like marketing or product creation.

But the basic truth is applicable to almost any situation: When we really want to focus on something, we pay close attention. We want details that can help us make good decisions.

And at Buffer, we want the details that can help us grow as an inclusive and diverse team. We want to be conscious of how we grow: With a focus on the values that guide us, and with an awareness that a diverse team across a variety of perspectives not only helps us represent our audience better but also makes us more innovative.

We’re not where we want to be yet in regards to a truly diverse team, but we’ve taken some small steps in this direction, including:

As we’ve shared these changes and efforts, one of the major comments we’ve heard in response has been: “Great! So what kind of difference has all of this made?”

Good question!

pablo (23)

What gets measured, gets managed.

We’re grateful for the companies and individuals who’ve created frameworks to share, measure and understand tech and startup diversity data, including initiatives like Tracy Chou’s Women in Software Engineering Stats and DoubleUnion’s Open Diversity Data project.

We hope to add our own small contribution to this big effort with the Buffer diversity dashboard.

How the dashboard works

With this dashboard, we’re sharing real-time data on the demographic diversity of the Buffer team, as well as those who’ve expressed interest in joining our team, in the specific areas of:

  • Age
  • Gender
  • Ethnicity
  • English as a second language
  • LGBTQIA+ status
  • Veteran status
  • Family status
  • Disability status
  • Location

You can explore this self-reported data in a few different ways – view the makeup of the full Buffer team, or isolate by just technical roles (engineering, product, and data), just non-technical roles, and just executive leadership roles.

All Buffer team members are invited (but not required) to take a survey in order to collect this data.

We give all job candidates a similar survey. Again, they are invited (though not required) to share with us after their application is submitted.

What comes next

Sharing the dashboard is the very beginning of what we hope to do with this data.

We want to make the data more interactive so it’s easier to interpret and understand change over time. We’d love to add graphs representing the demographic makeup of the workforce of the United States, and even the world in order to see how our team makeup compares to these benchmarks, kind of like this graph from GigaOm:

overall-diversity-final-new

And we want to add new areas of study over time, because we know that right now we’re capturing only a small part of true, intersectional diversity.

But the main thing we want to do with this dashboard is use it to better understand how we can grow as a diverse and inclusive startup.

Right now, we don’t have a team makeup that feels representative of our community, and this dashboard could be key to figuring out why that is and making changes. Are our job opportunities reaching all kinds of people and communities, including underrepresented groups? Could we change the way we hire to eliminate more bias and create more inclusivity?

We hope the dashboard will be a way to benchmark all our future efforts and discover what, if any, changes we make will have an effect on these numbers. What gets measured, gets managed.

We want your thoughts

Making Buffer more inclusive is an ongoing effort, and members of the Buffer community have been amazingly kind to share their thoughts with us.

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