By following the framework, companies increased evidence-based feedback by about 44 to 52 percentage points.

The Bias Interrupters framework also required companies to track both career-enhancing work and non-promotable “office housework,” including scheduling meetings and cleaning the kitchen. 

Companies that followed the framework eliminated the bias against women in access to career-enhancing core technical work, the report said. In addition, companies eliminated the bias against women of color doing more non-promotable office housework, dropping from 27 percentage points to zero.

Looking ahead in an anti-DEI climate

At the moment, DEI faces a “delicate and uncomfortable environment,” several attorney panelists said at the Society for Human Resource Management’s annual conference in June. Following the U.S. Supreme Court’s college admissions decision, public backlash has drawn tension between the business case for DEI and the country’s shifting dynamics, they said.

Despite the backlash, 72% of C-suite and HR leaders said they intend to increase their DEI commitment during the next two years, according to a Bridge Partners report. Nearly all leaders said they believe DEI is important for the positive effects on recruiting, hiring and retention.

Most companies need better metrics though. About 41% of HR pros said DEI progress is a measurable objective for their leadership team, according to a report from Salary.com. In addition, only a third had a DEI budget, less than half had a leader designated to DEI, and HR leaders gave mixed responses about who the DEI leader should report to and how to keep top leaders accountable.