Summoning Strength in a Fractured World
Me presenting at a Roche North American sales conference. Photo courtesy of Roche.

Summoning Strength in a Fractured World

Perhaps it’s no coincidence that the tumultuous events of the past few weeks have fallen on the eve of Black History Month. Wherever you stand on the White House order to end diversity programs, if you’re reading this blog, you likely know a bit about me and my perspective as a champion of board diversity, health equity and eliminating health disparities. The ideas and stories I’m sharing here are intended to give you context — and hope.

Access changes lives, mine included.

When we get angry over an issue, it takes away our ability to understand others’ perspectives. It also can lead to dangerous oversimplification. I’d like to avoid using words that could trigger emotions and instead ask a question: How did you land your first real job?

Did you have access to a network that led to opportunities in the field you were aiming for? If you did have connections, when did you start to build them? What helped you gain access to the opportunities you were seeking?

Here’s my story: I grew up in Los Angeles in the 1960s and ’70s, a period marked by legal changes and often violent confrontations. Three events in the 1960s shook me to my core and made me realize life would be different for me.


Me (center) with my friend Richard (right) and cousin Donald (left)

  1. In 1965, when my parents, my cousin Donald and I were returning to Los Angeles from a camping trip, police stopped our car and held us at gunpoint. We’d returned to town during the Watts Riots.?
  2. Three years later, the assassination of Martin Luther King hit my Alabama-born parents hard. I still recall my mother’s tears that day.
  3. In the 1970s, school integration put me on a daily ride that changed my life. I was bussed from my home in South Central Los Angeles to Palms Junior High School in Culver City, Calif., and later to Birmingham High School in Van Nuys, Calif.?

Being bussed to faraway schools wasn’t exactly a handout. I caught the bus in my neighborhood at 6:30 a.m. and returned home at 6 p.m. In Culver City, my classmates made fun of my brightly colored, mismatched clothes. They used to stand in a circle around me and call me “Christmas tree.” My junior high math teacher called me “dumb” and gave me a “D” in his class until my mother, also a teacher, showed up and gave him a piece of her mind. After that, he treated me differently, and I finished the course with an “A.”?

Going to school in a more affluent neighborhood than my own gave me the opportunity to visit friends with different backgrounds. My buddy Josh, the son of Hollywood executives, lived in Encino. Growing up in a solidly middle-class Black neighborhood, I’d never seen a home like Josh’s: a mansion with a valley view, a pool and matching Lincoln Continentals in the driveway.?

Thus began my access to a different world and a cultural education that would serve me throughout my career. At the University of California, Santa Barbara, where I earned my B.A. in biological science and sociology, I was part of a tiny population of Black students that remains small to this day. In grad school, as I began my career and all along the way, I was often the only Black person in the room.

Through it all, I’ve relied on my mother’s teaching. She said: “Things will be different for you, so get over it! You’re going to have to work twice as hard as everyone else to get where you want to go, but everything you learn, everything you do — no one can take that away from you.” This philosophy led me to strive for excellence — even perfection. My performance in the business world was based on metrics and sales figures. The biotech industry is fiercely competitive. There simply isn’t room for mediocrity or an erosion of standards.

The bottom line: Having an equal opportunity to succeed gave me access: a chance to compete for the positions that launched my career and led me to the C-suite and boardroom.?

To get back to the question we started with: I landed my first job as a sales rep with Burroughs Wellcome Pharmaceutical Company (which later merged with another company to form GSK) thanks to a connection with an on-campus recruiter at UC Santa Barbara. Without access to such opportunities, I doubt I’d be sharing my story with you today.?


Me presenting at a Roche global executive conference in Switzerland. Photo courtesy of Roche.

Black is beautiful for business.

Business leaders have been speaking out about the value of diversity in a business context. Here are a few of diversity’s benefits, from a business perspective:??

  • It’s profitable.

JP Morgan Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon, who, like many leaders, stood by corporate diversity initiatives, called the company’s community outreach efforts to the Black, Hispanic, LGBT, veteran and disabled communities “90% for-profit.”?

“Wherever I go, red states, blue states, green states, mayors and governors said they like what we do,” Dimon said. “We’re very proud of what we've done, and what we’ve done is lift up cities, schools, states, hospitals, countries, companies — and we’re going to do more of the same.”

  • It builds a better talent pool.?

DEI policies aren’t perfect. Neither is the way we handle finance or HR or any number of business practices. The goal is to root out inefficiencies and glut and make things better. Fine-tuning diversity policies is good business. Wiping out opportunities to hire the best, brightest and most talented people for the job is not.

Mark Cuban, the entrepreneur, venture capitalist and minority owner of the Dallas Mavericks, has been speaking up about this topic. “DEI doesn’t mean you don’t hire on merit,” Cuban said. “Diversity means you expand the possible pool of candidates as widely as you can. Once you’ve identified the candidates, you hire the person you believe is the best.”?

This practice is especially important when you consider that, although American businesses are creating hundreds of thousands of jobs each month, a significant number of positions remain unfilled. In Indiana, where I live most of the time, government officials are building programs and changing policies to build a workforce for the future. For example, Indiana needs to grow and develop the state’s tech workforce by an additional 41,000+ tech workers by 2030. TechPoint's analysis shows that talent is evenly distributed in the state, but opportunity is not.?

  • It improves innovation. I saw this firsthand at Roche, especially during and immediately after the Covid-19 pandemic, when our team and company accelerated six groundbreaking products in 11 months. To get there, we ignored hierarchy and used diverse hiring practices to add hundreds of people to our team. We transformed our culture and operations to deliver results like never before — in both business and public health.?

One of my favorite stories about diversity and innovation stars Michael Jordan, whose symbiotic relationship with Nike helped grow two of the most popular sports brands in the world. Famously, Jordan’s mom encouraged the Chicago Bulls rookie to sign his first sneaker deal with Nike in 1984. Thus began a partnership that paved the way for athletes to make millions from sponsorships and endorsements. Jordan had a voice in his namesake shoe’s success. In the late 80s, when he asked for more design control, a collaboration with designer Tinker Hatfield transformed Air Jordans into a luxury item, not just shoes you’d wear to the gym — a pivotal innovation. Jordan’s partnership with Nike continues to this day and is considered one of the most successful in sports history, encompassing entertainment, fashion and lifestyle. It made Jordan the first billionaire player in NBA history, with an estimated net worth of $3.5 billion — and it made Nike billions, too.?

  • ?It increases productivity and performance.

The stats tell the story, and people who work with me know I like to share them:

  • ?A McKinsey and Company report notes a 39% increased likelihood of outperformance in companies for those in the top quartile of ethnic representation versus the bottom quartile.?
  • According to research, companies with diverse workforces tend to have up to 2.5 times higher cash flow per employee compared to less diverse organizations.

From a boardroom perspective, I’ve seen the power of diversity in real time. If you add one woman to a board, you have diversity in the boardroom. If you add a second woman, you’ll see even more diverse thought. The more diverse the boardroom, the more diverse the thought. If your board is homogenized, you get groupthink.

  • It improves quality.

Serving on boards in the health care and biotech industries, I’ve experienced firsthand the power of making a difference as the only Black voice in the room. The perspective I add as a senior executive — and as an African American — is powerful. When I speak up, my words have an impact because of my audience and my experience. The same is true for other people of color.

Diverse representation also plays a part in the performance of pharmaceuticals and other therapies. It all starts with clinical trials. Here’s an example: Non-Hispanic Black women experience a higher prevalence of preeclampsia compared to other groups. If a pharma company or researcher is testing treatments for preeclampsia and doesn’t select a diverse group of women for the trial, it can become difficult to validate results. Studying the disease across diverse populations ensures treatment effectiveness is applicable to all women at risk, not just a specific group. That promotes better health care for everyone

For Black people, the matter of diverse clinical trials truly is urgent, especially with cancer research. For all cancers combined and for most major cancers, Black Americans have the highest mortality rate of any racial and ethnic group.?

Next month, I’ll share more thoughts on the topic of board diversity in an interview with Mary Smith, in light of the recent ruling of the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to strike down Nasdaq board diversity rules.

It’s time to give each other grace.

In this fractured world, it feels controversial to talk about concepts like mercy and justice. Yet it’s essential that we keep mercy and justice alive. It can feel like history is being erased. All the more reason to reflect on our history and share it — so we never forget. Some bridges seem to be so broken we could never build them again, but we can. Now is the time to give each other grace, hold on to hope and work toward solutions. As epidemiologist Katelyn Jetlina recently wrote, even small actions — calling a friend, connecting with others, sharing a story — can ripple outward.

How am I coping with the new obstacles to achieving my mission? Each day, I do what I’ve always done: Focus on my parents’ teachings, my work, the people and issues I care about, and my faith in God. I’ve been inspired by one Bible verse in particular, Isaiah 54:17:

No weapon that is formed against thee shall prosper; and every tongue that shall rise against thee in judgment thou shalt condemn. This is the heritage of the servants of the Lord, and their righteousness is of me ...


Dwayne Dantzler

FocalPoint Certified Business Leadership Coach | Business Owner | MBA | Servant Leader | Empowering Business Owners to Imagine the Possibilities | Financial Professional

1 周

Rod, thank you for sharing your story and insights on the importance of diversity in your journey from primary education and academia to the C-suite and now the Board Room. The wide-ranging perspectives stemming from collective ideas in developing successful strategies that benefit our society and the bottom line for shareholders remain significant. The exceptional talent I encountered while working at a multinational firm greatly expanded my worldview. However, I grew up in a diverse neighborhood of middle-class Irish, Italian, and Black families in Philadelphia, which incorporated various backgrounds into my perspective, just as my public education did. Those experiences enabled me to transition beyond the corporate sphere into an entrepreneurial realm, supported by a network that provides advice, support, and mentorship through the Chambers of Commerce and other connections in my professional circle. Regrettably, DEI has often been negatively portrayed as pitting one group against another, contrary to the values you expressed in your progression from boyhood to adult professional.

Bill Curtis-Davidson

AI Governance Expert (AIGP, FHCA) | Human-Centered Design | Digital Inclusion | Trusted Advisor

2 周

Rod, thank you so much for sharing your story and your perspective. This is giving me and all of us encouragement to keep up the good fight!

回复
Jamie Wright MBA PHR

Head of Diversity Equity & Inclusion - Americas

2 周

Well said and timely!

回复
Detra Lynn Mills

MBA | JD | PhD student in final sprint

2 周

Excellent addition to the narrative, Rod. As someone who had the tremendous opportunity and privilege to work under your leadership, I know first-hand that you practice what you preach. Your authenticity is unmatched.

Dion Cobb

-THINKTANK THE SOLUTION/CURE EMBODIED

2 周

I TOOK CARE OF MY INTERGRITY NOW IT IS TIME TO PRESENT IT TO HUMANITY ,INCORPORATE ME AND IMPLEMENT THE BRILLIANCE EMBODIED AND ENCAPSULATED WITHIN -R.C. BTW A RESURGENCE OF RESOLUTE RUDIMENTARY PRINCIPLES CAN IRRADICATE THE SORDID UN SAVOURY BEHAVIOR AMONST OUR DWELLERS REVELING IN IGNORANCE AND ETTIQUETE ABSENTEEISM. I HAVE THE SCHEMATIC AND NEURO ALGORITHM TO FULLFILL AND PERFORM THIS ELUSIVE INGREDIENT IN CULTURE AND SOCIETY.TRINED AND STUDIED UNDER THE ANCIENTS!

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