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LinkedIn: We’re (a little) better at hiring women & minorities than Google is

LinkedIn: We're (a little) better at hiring women & minorities than Google is
Image Credit: Ben Scholzen/Flickr

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Taking a cue from fellow Silicon Valley tech giant Google, LinkedIn today disclosed statistics on gender and race for its employee base. And at least for now, it gets points for having a higher share of women and minorities than Google.

Of the more than 5,400 people that the social network for business employs, 39 percent are women, compared with 30 percent at Google, according to the data in a blog post from Pat Wadors, the vice president of global talent at LinkedIn.

Bottom line: Men outnumber women at both companies — just as they do at Hewlett-Packard (see page 65 of this PDF for the latest figures), one of just a handful of tech companies that have revealed figures like this in the past.

LinkedIn also broke out race for its employees in the U.S. — 53 percent, compared with 61 percent among Googlers.

Like Google, LinkedIn doesn’t provide global stats on race. “That's because legal complexities prohibit us from asking about the ethnicity of employees in many countries outside of the U.S., so accurately reporting that data is not currently possible,” Wadors wrote.

LinkedIn wants to do more to improve diversity, and Wadors highlighted several ways in which the company has been trying to do that, including an annual hacking day for women.

Even so, the numbers validate something Google pointed out when it released its numbers last month.

“Minority groups are underrepresented in tech and in the U.S. education system,” the search giant said at the time.



LinkedIn is the world's largest professional network on the internet, with more than 259 million members worldwide, including executives from Fortune 500 companies. Founded on May 5, 2003, by Reid Hoffman and founding team members f... read more »

Google's innovative search technologies connect millions of people around the world with information every day. Founded in 1998 by Stanford Ph.D. students Larry Page and Sergey Brin, Google today is a top web property in all major glob... read more »