inclusivity Archives - IDPro https://idpro.org/tag/inclusivity/ The Professional Organization for Digital Identity Management Tue, 20 Jun 2023 19:15:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://idpro.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/cropped-idpro_stickerA-circle-100-32x32.jpg inclusivity Archives - IDPro https://idpro.org/tag/inclusivity/ 32 32 Are You the Next IDPro President? https://idpro.org/are-you-the-next-idpro-president/ https://idpro.org/are-you-the-next-idpro-president/#respond Mon, 08 Nov 2021 15:18:27 +0000 https://idpro.org/?p=1365 IDPro®  continues to evolve and has grown significantly since its launch four years ago. From founding this organization in 2017 […]

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IDPro®  continues to evolve and has grown significantly since its launch four years ago. From founding this organization in 2017 to the 2021 global launch of the CIDPRO™—Certified Identity Professional—program, our organization is reaching new heights with the support of our dedicated leadership team and committed members. 

IDPro fosters ethics and excellence in the practice and profession of digital identity. We provide our members with world-class opportunities for learning, career progression, and industry contribution. In support of our mission and in alignment with our values, we are excited to announce an open position for the role of IDPro President. 

Identity practitioners and qualified individuals from all backgrounds are encouraged to apply: we believe strongly that diversity within the industry benefits all of us.

We are seeking someone capable and interested in being a highly visible leader who can provide senior-level, chief executive direction and management of strategic efforts according to the role as outlined by the IDPro Board of Directors. Working in collaboration with and under the direction of the Board, the President will:

  • Assist with the development and execution of the organization’s strategic initiatives
  • Lead outreach to industry luminaries for potential partnerships
  • Act as a development crusader and manage partner relationships
  • Define and lead initiatives to drive member recruitment
  • Represent the organization, communicating our values in both domestic and international venues

The President is the Executive Director of the organization and will coordinate, manage and drive the activities of existing operations, membership, finance, and marketing staff as well as IDPro programs and committees in line with organizations strategic and operational priorities.

Experience with startup and formative non-profit professional organizations and alignment with IDPro’s values are necessary as these are foundational elements that allow us to contribute to and lead the IAM industry. We are proud to operate within a team-oriented approach, working constructively, inclusively and flexibly in a global organization that spans cultures, nationalities and timezones—and we expect this individual to demonstrate those same attributes. 
See the full job description here. If you would like to join our dynamic organization and work with like-minded identity industry professionals, we hope you will consider applying. Please contact careers@idpro.org to learn more.

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2021 IDPro® Skills, Programs & Diversity Survey – the results are in! https://idpro.org/2021-idpro-skills-programs-diversity-survey-the-results-are-in/ https://idpro.org/2021-idpro-skills-programs-diversity-survey-the-results-are-in/#respond Fri, 05 Nov 2021 13:12:25 +0000 https://idpro.org/?p=1339 We are excited to share that the results of the 2021 IDPro Skills, Programs & Diversity Survey are now available […]

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We are excited to share that the results of the 2021 IDPro Skills, Programs & Diversity Survey are now available for download!

This represents the fourth annual survey of the digital identity industry conducted by IDPro and made possible by our members and the participants. We began this as a means of better understanding the goals, interests, skills, and noticeable trends among identity industry professionals and the enterprises that employ them. This year, the survey was expanded to include a section examining diversity and inclusivity within the industry. The survey also took place during the ongoing global COVID-19 pandemic, so it has provided unique insight into the short-term pressures and long-term trends this will have on the industry.

Other items worth noting:

  • COVID continues to impact our industry—work from anywhere, digital transformation, and the need for practitioners to connect.
  • Directories are becoming less important, as IDaaS and other technologies abstract away the direct visibility of user-data hierarchy. 
  • Identity Verification is now a significant focus for both enterprises and professionals.
  • Early-stage professionals consistently overestimate their skills, while experienced practitioners underestimate theirs, impacting career development and presenting employers with hiring, nurturing, and retention challenges.
  • Diversity and inclusivity are important to professionals and to enterprises alike.

Read more on each of these topics and many more in the full report!

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Why the Identity Industry Needs Diversity… https://idpro.org/why-the-identity-industry-needs-diversity/ https://idpro.org/why-the-identity-industry-needs-diversity/#respond Wed, 10 Jul 2019 21:31:00 +0000 https://www.idpro.org/?p=665 The diversity issue in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, collectively known as STEM, is well documented. In a report from […]

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The diversity issue in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, collectively known as STEM, is well documented.

In a report from Inclusive Boards[1] in the UK, women make up only 12.6% of board members in the sector – compared to the 30% female representation now achieved by FTSE 100 businesses.

In a study around gender diversity the UNESCO Institute for Statistics[2] examined the gap in science and found that worldwide, only 28% of science professionals are women. In Sub-Saharan Africa, only 30% of women are exploring in STEM and in the US in Silicon Valley 76% of technical jobs are held by men[3] 

But gender diversity only represents part of the problem. In the UK just 8.5% of senior leaders in technology are from a minority background[4], and a report from the Ascend Group found that the racial gap in tech leadership positions between white men and minority men was larger than the gender gap between white men and white women.[5] White women were 31 percent more likely than Hispanic men to be executives, and 88 percent and 97 percent more likely than Asian and Black men respectively. Meanwhile, for minority women, the “race-to-gender factor” has only worsened since 2007. Reads the report: “In general, although minority women faced both racial and gender gaps … race, not gender, was increasingly the more important factor in limiting minority women in the pipeline.”  

Bias

We all consistently apply our biases throughout daily life—in our hiring decisions, reviews, and in casual interactions. Even well-intentioned people can harbour unconscious biases that perpetuate stereotypes.

If everyone on your team looks the same and is from a similar background, you may reach consensus quicker about what to develop, build, or even the strategy for the company, but are those decisions the right ones?

What Are The Consequences?

We are now starting to see analysis of bias within technology systems, and some of those systems sit within and adjacent to the identity industry.

A study by MIT researcher Joy Buolamwini [6] found that some facial-analysis systems produced an error rate of 0.8 percent for light-skinned men; this error rate increased when a white female face was shown and ballooned to 34.7 percent for dark-skinned women.

 ( Joy Buolamwini, a researcher in the MIT Media Lab’s Civic Media group)

According to the paper, researchers at a major U.S. technology company claimed an accuracy rate of more than 97 percent for a face-recognition system they’d designed. But the data set used to assess its performance was more than 77 percent male and more than 83 percent white.

This kind of bias is going to make systems less inclusive, and ultimately less effective.

How Does Diversity Help?

A study by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG)[7] found that diversity increases the bottom line for companies. In both developing and developed economies, companies with above-average diversity on their leadership teams report a greater payoff from innovation and higher EBIT margins. The study found that “increasing the diversity of leadership teams leads to more and better innovation and improved financial performance.” Companies that have more diverse management teams have 19% higher revenue due to innovation.

Additionally, research by Mckinsey[8]  Delivering through diversity, reaffirms the global relevance of the link between diversity—defined as a greater proportion of women and a more mixed ethnic and cultural composition in the leadership of large companies—and company financial performance, measuring not only profitability (in terms of earnings before interest and taxes, or EBIT) but also longer-term value creation (or economic profit), exploring diversity at different levels of the organization, considering a broader understanding of diversity (beyond gender and ethnicity), and providing insight into best practices.

These findings are huge for tech companies, start-ups, and industry where innovation is the key to growth. It shows that diversity is not just a metric to be strived for, it is actually an integral part of a successful revenue generating business.

There is also evidence that more diverse teams, make slower but better decisions. Jerry Kang, Vice Chancellor for Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion and Distinguished Professor of Law at the UCLA School of Law has stated: “Diversity will increase the universe of possibilities, solutions, and ideas considered. But it often creates a sort of friction, so it slows things down. It’s not always that it creates a different answer. But the way the answer is created, and the number of solutions are expanded—that’s what’s improved.”[9]

What Does This Mean For The Identity Industry?

When we think about this in the context of identity solutions, the need for diversity is arguably even more concentrated. Humanity is diverse, therefore identity solutions (which are being designed for humans) need to be able to embrace that level of diversity to work optimally.

As an industry, if we are developing standards, technologies and solutions for identity, we should be thinking about how we include those we are building them for on our teams, in our design, in our testing, and in our deployment. Digital identity solutions built for everyone should be built by everyone.

What Can the Industry Do 

After 2 years of informal gatherings and discussions that helped scope the problems and the potential solutions, Women in Identity was formally established as a not-for-profit, grassroots organisation in June this year, with a mission to help inspire, elevate and support a more diverse workforce in the digital identity industry.  The organisation is open to everyone and has long term ambitions not only to support individuals in their career development, but also to help employers and the industry as a whole develop better practices. These efforts, aided by other like-minded organisations and individuals, will in turn lead to products and solutions that are properly fit for all.  Because diversity for our industry isn’t a desire…….it’s a necessity.


You can find additional information at www.womeninidentity.org

About the Author

Emma Lindley is an advisor on digital identity and co-founder of Women in Identity a not for profit organisation focused on developing talent and diversity in the identity industry. 

Over a career of 16 years in identity Emma has held various roles, most recently as Head of Identity and Risk at Visa, previous board level roles at Confyrm, Innovate Identity and The Open Identity Exchange, and was instrumental in the commercial development of GB Group’s position in the identity market back in 2003. 

She has been recognised in the KNOW Identity Top 100 leaders in Identity in 2017, 2018 and 2019, the Innovate Finance Powerlist for Women 2016 and 2017, and was voted CEO of the year at the KNOW Identity Awards. She has an MBA from Manchester Business School and completed her thesis in Competitive Strategy in the Identity Market.


[1] https://www.inclusiveboards.co.uk/tech-report-launch/

[2] http://uis.unesco.org/en/topic/women-science

[3] https://www.forbes.com/sites/annajohansson/2017/12/19/why-millennials-are-demanding-even-more-diversity-in-tech/#2c196882386b

[4] https://www.inclusiveboards.co.uk/tech-report-launch/

[5] https://www.citylab.com/equity/2017/10/when-it-comes-to-tech-racial-disparities-are-far-worse-than-gender-disparities/542013/

[6] http://news.mit.edu/2018/study-finds-gender-skin-type-bias-artificial-intelligence-systems-0212

[7] https://www.bcg.com/en-us/publications/2018/how-diverse-leadership-teams-boost-innovation.aspx[8] https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/organization/our-insights/delivering-through-diversity
[9] https://www.ericsson.com/en/blog/2019/3/how-can-we-stop-technology-from-inheriting-our-bias

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