At tomato pay we unequivocally stand by those making a change for the better to give Black individuals rights most people take for granted; to lead a life without fear, without discrimination and equal opportunities to succeed and flourish.
It continues to simultaneously anger us and break our hearts to see how the Black community is treated - a community who designed and invented so many cultural experiences enjoyed by masses of people globally. Financially, the Black community who own businesses generate over £10 billion for the British economy, and according to the Institute of Practitioners in Advertising (IPA), the spending power of Black consumers is £300 billion in the UK alone.
We could go into the many sad, unfortunate catalysts for the Black Lives Matters Movement’s rise in profile this year, however, it should have always been obvious that racism towards Black people has always been prevalent yet highly ignored for centuries. Former professional NBA player, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar words come to mind: “Racism is like dust in the air. It seems invisible – until you let the sun in. Then you see it’s everywhere. As long as we keep shining that light, we have a chance of cleaning it”. The world is forever changing, and with that, people’s views and actions towards one another must change too.
We believe that the Black Lives Matters Movement is a watershed moment. The actions taken now as individuals and as businesses will define our generation forever.
Before we get into more of our thoughts and own actions as a business, we created this doc with a list of ways you can support the movement. It was initially sent around internally over a month ago, but we believe that the more people who see it, the better. It is by no means exhaustive. We welcome feedback, especially the names of small black-owned businesses, and people who deserve exposure in the fintech/finance network to add to panels, include in blog posts, or work with. Please email Lisa at lisa@tomatopay.co.uk for any suggestions/feedback.
No one is born racist.
Generation after generation has made huge efforts to improve the world we live in. This comes as no surprise; we live in a globalised, more technologically advanced world. As a consequence, the masses have a platform to share and expose various levels of atrocities taking place and those that are directly affected by it. Fortunately, this open dialogue has allowed people to protest for swift action to rectify these wrongs, and allow people to help financially, help by amplifying the message, or forwarding these situations to the bodies who are involved and can take action to fix it.
In this blog post, we will be giving our take on diversity as a long-term plan, not as an ‘initiative’ or a ‘PR bandwagon to jump on’. We believe that we should all be looking internally at how to change attitudes and biases that impact every single decision from hiring and pay-rises, to product development and product design - cultivating a diverse workplace should always be a long-term plan embedded into the culture of one’s business. Not only will this create economic prosperity for the individual, the company and the global economy, but it is, in the bluntest of terms, the right, moral thing to do.
Diversity as an embedded, long-term plan
There are many different things to tackle when creating a plan to embed a shift in thinking culturally as a leader.
We won’t claim to be experts so I point all those reading this to Harvard Business Review’s (HBR) ‘Changing Company Culture Requires a Movement Not a Mandate’, UX Collective’s ‘The racial implications of AI and UX’, Adobe’s ‘Removing Bias in AI - Tackling Gender and Racial Bias’, McKinsey’s ‘Diversity wins: How inclusion matters’ and the long, but worth reading, ‘Toward a racially just workplace’ by HBR to start looking deeper into the issues at play here when thinking about racial bias whilst creating products and building companies.
What we can talk about with authority is (1) what tomato pay's cultural DNA looks like, and (2) how we have established it.
First, some internal statistics on the tomato pay team’s DNA:
As a fintech company, we ensure that we are all aware of the wider issues at hand, and why inclusivity and being aware of prejudices are so important when building a financial product, and setting up a business for success in 2020.
Working for underserved communities, and using these technologies meant that we have always had to consider diversity within the team as a long-term plan. We acknowledge that training alone does very little to change behaviour, therefore we look to change our systems and processes to be as inclusive as possible.
Of course, we have much we can improve on, and we are committed to making changes as we are always striving to do better. We are aware that the only way to create a diverse workplace in the long-term is to achieve representation on all levels of the hierarchy. We also need to ask ourselves questions such as - how will we support others who are not fully abled? Are we ensuring that our workplace is LGBTQIA inclusive? How can we hire and retain women in senior management (one area we admittedly are doing poorly in)? How can we attract and hire more people who are Black, Asian or of mixed ethnicity?
These are areas we are particularly looking into as we grow, especially as we publicly committed in our BCR Capability and Innovation Fund bid to create jobs alongside untied (the UK’s tax app) and support the struggling UK economy.
As we stated early on in this blog, the spending power of Black people is often under-appreciated, and to stimulate spending, as a business leader you must look at how to create jobs for the majority of people, not the minority of people - a diverse, morally just company is much more profitable than one that is not. To ignore a whole community and their spending power is beyond foolish.
On an individual level, you must be able to live your life knowing you did your part in creating a fairer society for communities who are discriminated against because of the colour of their skin. We all have to play our part in dismantling the systematic racism ingrained in our society. People should be treasured because of their personalities, talents and experience, and following the strong support seen for the Black Lives Matters Movement, we can only hope the world follows suit soon.