Twitter — the platform where many in the tech industry shared their equal pay stories and gloomy eroticismwhere Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg spread the message of her equal pay campaign #20PercentCounts — announced their own commitment in a tweet Tuesday.
Twitter doesn't just support equal pay. They have it:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
It turns out Twitter has conducted its own study to determine that its employees are paid fairly, which they just decided to reveal in lieu with Equal Pay Day.
"Twitter has a longstanding commitment to paying our people equitably, across the board, and our compensation philosophy, strategies and practices reflect that," a Twitter spokesperson wrote in an emailed statement.
"We conducted an analysis comparing pay for women and underrepresented minorities in the U.S., including base salary, incentive compensation, and equity compensation, to ensure that we are paying people fairly. The results showed that women and employees of all races and ethnicities are paid equitably across the board at Twitter. We are proud of our results, and remain committed to ensuring pay equity for everyone, regardless of gender or race, now and in the future," the statement continued.
This doesn't mean that everyone at Twitter makes the same. Rather, people in similar positions are paid equitably, regardless of race and gender, according to Twitter.
To determine that Twitter employs were paid equitably, Twitter recruited an internal and external team of experts to run a recent study. Twitter declined to share the names of the external resources.
The study does not compare before or after data but instead the current state of the company. Twitter has 3,600 employees.
Despite this success in Twitter's state of the business, Twitter is not a leader in diversity. Its workforce is predominantly white and male. Underrepresented minorities held 9 percent of the technical positions at Twitter in 2016, up from 7 percent in 2016. Twitter's technical workforce is 15 percent women.
But the company has set goals for 2017:
One of Twitter's many slogans is "where inclusion lives."
More than 160,000 tweets about Equal Pay Day were sent over the last 24 hours.
Twitter's VP of diversity and inclusion Jeffrey Siminoff left the company on March 1. Twitter has yet to replace his role.
Wall of Moms accused of antiNASA sends Perseverance rover to Mars in stunning launchGoogle promotes wearing a face mask in helpful DoodleOppo made an Apple Watch clone that can match your 'lewk' to its face'Animal Crossing' helped Nintendo increase profits by 400 percent. Yep, 400.Snapchat Bitmoji will now wear Ralph LaurenSurvey reveals who's winning the delivery app wars: DoorDash, Uber Eats, or GrubhubApple launches new iMac with better display and 1080p webcamTwitter finally bans white supremacist David DukeBeyoncé's 'Black is King' is stunning and powerful: Review Tesla EVs cost too much, so drivers turn to car Apple fixes iOS 14 bug that resets default browser and mail apps Twitter will ask everyone if they read an article before they retweet it Spruce up your Zoom video calls with these helpful add Tesla is first car compatible with Amazon's Ring Car Connect These are the TVs to buy to make the most of PS5 and Xbox Series X Aesthetic iOS 14 home screens that'll inspire you to customize your iPhone Google will shut down election ads after polls close in the U.S. Google Maps now shows COVID Elon Musk announces first Tesla
0.2682s , 10026.703125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【gloomy eroticism】Twitter reveals its employees have equitable pay on #EqualPayDay,Global Hot Topic Analysis