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Sarah K. White
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DEI rollbacks: Where top tech companies stand on diversity, equity, and inclusion

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May 15, 20258 mins
Diversity and InclusionHiringTechnology Industry

The Trump administration’s sweeping executive orders to scale back DEI initiatives are causing shifts in company policies as well. Here’s where major tech companies currently stand on promoting broader representation.

Group of diverse business professionals, businessmen and businesswomen, networking at a conference event. They are smiling, conversing, and engaging in discussions during a daytime seminar.
Credit: Jacob Lund / Shutterstock

In the wake of the Trump Administration’s campaign against DEI initiatives, many companies in the tech industry have fallen in line. In a complete 180 from promises made in 2020 to maintain a commitment to diversity, many high-profile tech organizations such as Google, Amazon, and Meta are now making headlines for ending DEI programs. And they moved fast, making changes to DEI language and programming as early as Jan. 10, more than a week before the Trump administration officially took office.

Organizations across every industry are reportedly facing pressure from shareholders, with proposals being raised to reduce DEI language and eliminate diversity goals from public filings. Companies such as Costco and Apple have pushed back against these proposals, however, but many more have acquiesced, moving to eliminate DEI language from public filings, fire DEI personnel, and cancel internal DEI programs and initiatives.

As the Trump administration continues to keep DEI in its crosshairs, here’s where major players in the tech industry currently stand on diversity, equity, and inclusion.

IBM

Early in the year, IBM appeared to have plans to hold its ground on DEI initiatives and programming. When first asked by to drop the company’s DEI pay incentive target, IBM initially moved to block the proposal. However, in recent months Big Blue leadership has made a shift, to the company’s DEI practices. It’s a surprising move for a company that , adding sexual orientation to its global nondiscrimination policy in 1984, and updating it to include gender identity and expression in 2002.

On April 10, right-wing influencer Robby Starbuck made a statement regarding an internal memo that IBM sent out announcing the end of the organization’s DEI department and the Diversity Council, which was originally established in the 1990s. IBM also announced the company would no longer be participating in the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) workplace index, despite earning a score of 100% for 15 consecutive years, ranking as one of the best places to work for LGBTQ+ equality.

In 2020, the company , who was fired from IBM during her transition in 1968, even after the organization promised to support her and despite her significant contributions to the industry. Despite this history, the organization has once again flipped its support, announcing they will no longer encourage employees to recognize preferred pronouns.

In a , IBM said these changes were motivated by the “inherent tensions of practicing inclusion,” along with legal factors in light of increase scrutiny in the past year. During an April 30 shareholder meeting, The Heritage Foundation once again issued a proposal asking IBM shareholders to vote to end DEI. The proposal was removed after IBM made changes to diminish DEI in the organization.

It’s a stark turn for a company that has a longstanding history of being at the forefront of diversity, equity, and inclusion in the tech industry. But in the face of pressures from the current administration, IBM has seemingly fallen in line with several of the other industry-leading tech companies on this list.

Meta

In January this year, centered around diverse hiring practices. Chief diversity officer Maxine Williams was also moved into a new role focused on accessibility and engagement. Meta alleges that some of this pull back is to better focus efforts on how to apply fair and consistent practices that mitigate bias for all, no matter your background, according to a from Janelle Gale, VP of HR.

So far, these efforts have included ending representation goals, stopping diverse approaches to hiring, and abandoning supplier diversity efforts, while also cancelling equity and inclusion programs and cutting the Meta DEI team. It’s difficult to understand how these efforts will support the greater picture of diversity in a notoriously homogenous industry, especially given Meta’s own diversity data. In 2022,  showing that its US workforce comprised of 46.5% Asian and 37.6% White employees, but only 6.7% Hispanic and 4.9% Black. The goal was to double the number of Hispanic and Black employees by 2024, but it seems those plans have been abandoned.

The company also pledged a $1 million donation to Trump’s inauguration, and added UFC president and CEO Dana White, a vocal Trump supporter, to its board. The company also replaced its president of global affairs, bringing on Joel Kaplan, a prominent Republican, according to Axios.

Related reading: DEI MIA in new Meta AI advisory group

Google

Following in the footsteps of Meta, , and although the company has consistently released diversity reports since 2014, the  that Google will evaluate further releasing such reports.

Additionally, Google said it plans to review all DEI initiatives to see that it’s compliant with executive orders aimed at diminishing DEI. The company’s annual 10-K filing made no mention of diversity, despite mentioning it eight times in the previous 2023 filing. The company also removed a handful of cultural events from the default Google Calendar at the end of 2024 and for all Google Maps users in the US. Meanwhile, users in Mexico see Gulf of Mexico, while all users outside the US and Mexico see both Gulf of Mexico and Gulf of America when viewing that area of the map. Google has since been over the renaming.

In the first all-staff meeting held after Google announced it would retire DEI initiatives and abandon a pledge not to build militarized AI, Melonie Parker, the company’s former head of diversity, told employees the organization was updating programs focused on DEI content. Chief legal officer Kent Walker also regarding the development of militarized AI by stating AI principles have changed since they were first introduced in 2018.

Plus, Walker told employees it’s for the good of society that the company stays engaged in any geopolitical discussions surrounding AI, which is why they removed prohibitions against building AI for weapons and surveillance. This comes not long after Trump’s executive order repealing Biden’s AI oversight order, which was in place to regulate potential risks around AI development regarding national security, the economy, and overall public health.

Amazon

Amazon cut diversity-related language out of its annual report and website this year and has halted some DEI programs. , the company was in the process of winding down outdated programs and materials, despite a pledge set in 2020, and reaffirmed in 2021, to double Black leadership at the VP and director levels. However, the organization’s Positions page states the organization is committed to creating a diverse and inclusive company, according to a statement to TechCrunch. The organization has also stated that employee-led affinity groups will continue operating.

There was an effort to boycott retailers, including Amazon, over reversed DEI policies, but according to Bloomberg Second Measure US Consumer Spend Index, spending with Amazon stayed within the typical daily variation during this time.

Apple

In a recent shareholder meeting, a proposal from a conservative group calling to strike down DEI policies was rejected, with Apple advising shareholders to vote against the proposal. Apple hasn’t made any changes to its website or diversity language, seemingly committed to moving forward with fostering a more equitable industry, and its website maintains its diversity data, allowing users to see global demographic data on employees since 2014.

At a recent AGM, a  and quickly rejected with an overwhelming 97% votes cast against it. In the current climate, Apple has made moves that show the organization plans to maintain its support of inclusivity and progress. 

Salesforce

Salesforce is another company that scrubbed mentions of diversity targets from its 2023 10-K filing, but it released a 2024 “,” reinforcing its commitment to diversity and representation. CEO Marc Benioff also that the company would stand by employees in the face of anti-DEI orders from the Trump administration.

“Presidents change, administrations change. We don’t change,” Benioff said . “We’re the same company. We’re the same core values.”

Salesforce has disclosed the demographic makeup of its workforce before it was commonplace. It’s also launched efforts to reduce pay gaps, and Benioff cancelled events in protest of a law in Indiana that allowed businesses to use religious freedom as a defense against LGBTQ+ discrimination. Salesforce also pushed for a commitment to DEI in 2019, before the greater 2020 push for DEI following the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis. 

Microsoft

In the organization’s , Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella acknowledged the importance of maintaining a diverse workforce. But soon after, the organization moved to lay off its internal DEI team, noting changing business needs in .

Microsoft was quick to respond to allegations that these layoffs were in response to the woke backlash in the rest of the industry. , the organization stated the positions were eliminated due to redundancy on the events team, and that the company’s global DEI team was still intact.

A spokesperson for Microsoft also told HR Dive the organization remains committed to diversity and inclusion, noting the focus remains unwavering and that it plans to hold firm on expectations, prioritizing accountability, and continuing to focus on this work.

Other companies abandoning DEI

  • Intel has made moves to on its most recent 10-K filing, as well as eliminate some diversity targets.
  • OpenAI, an organization currently at the forefront of gen AI technology, quietly on its website to instead read “building dynamic teams,” removing any mention of diversity and inclusion.
  • Tesla, run by vocal DEI critic Elon Musk and face of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), has removed all mention of DEI from its 10-K forms, and has been very vocal in his resistance to embrace DEI and overall rejection of the concept itself. Tesla is not a company known for its public support of DEI and has only released one DEI report in 2020.
  • Workday has erased all mention of diversity targets originally outlined in its 2024 10-K form, but the DEI page is still live on the company’s website expressing a commitment to diversity. According to Workday’s 2024 Global Impact Report, the company also still employs a chief diversity officer.
  • Zoom , indicating a plan to work with external consultants. And after releasing the first diversity report in 2020, Zoom has not released one since 2022.

Other companies committed to diversity

  • Nvidia has maintained its Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging page on its website and released its , maintaining a section dedicated to people, diversity, and inclusion.
  • Oracle hasn’t made any changes to its diversity page on its website, still maintaining a statement that says diverse perspectives make its teams stronger and empower collaboration.

This article was originally published on March 31, 2025, and has been updated to reflect more recent developments.

Sarah K. White
Senior Writer

Sarah White is a senior writer at CIO.com, focusing on IT workplace trends, IT leadership, and DEI in the tech industry. She covers everything IT leaders need to know about hiring and retaining tech workers while also highlighting unique industry stories from organizations, nonprofits, and IT leaders. She previously wrote about consumer tech and B2B hardware, including notebook and smartphone reviews, later shifting to IT-careers based coverage. Her work covering DEI in the tech industry has gained recognition, earning a Gold Tabbie and a Silver ASPBE for her article “How Blacks in Technology Foundation is stomping the divide,” and another Silver ASBPE for coverage of “Invoking IT to help revitalize indigenous languages at risk of extinction.”

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