At Ralph Lauren, we are always looking to listen, learn, and deepen our work to create environments that reflect the values that define our brand—values like authenticity, dignity, and respect for one another. We want everyone to experience these values consistently. We have made commitments to deeply examine bias—including looking critically at the structures and practices inside our company, how we use our voice as a leader in our industry, and the role we play in portraying the American dream. As a part of this, along with our standing pledge to be Open to All and the racial equity commitments outlined in our June 2020 and May 2021 open letters from Ralph Lauren and Patrice Louvet, we have built on the structures and forums that enable us to take action thoughtfully and sustainably. Evolving the long-standing Employee Groups we’ve had since 2003, in June 2020 we set up additional internal safe spaces for dialogue about race to break down barriers and foster understanding through sharing personal experiences. In addition, we have created dedicated Diversity & Inclusion (D&I) Advisory Councils, empowered to directly advise our Executive Leadership Team, and D&I Working Groups, which are segmented into specialised workstreams to deliver equitable practices across every function, level, working environment, and region across our company. With this important structure at the center, we are progressing toward our company-wide commitments, including:
Company
Elevate Talent Into Leadership Ranks
For every open role at the Vice President level or above, we will interview at least one Black candidate as well as at least one candidate from other underrepresented groups. In addition, we have committed to ensuring that our Global Leadership Team is at least 10% Black, African, or African American and at least 20% people of colour by 2023.
Compensation and Benefits Equity
Our retail and distribution and fulfillment center populations are the most racially and ethnically diverse areas of our company. At the beginning of this year, we rolled out expanded medical benefits for our US part-time employee population. Looking ahead, we are committed to reviewing all internal policies on a continual basis to ensure equity for our Black, African, and African American employees and employees of colour.
Create Space for Our Amplification of Diverse Voices and Perspectives
We expanded both our D&I Employee Advisory Groups and RL Communities, including establishing the Asian, Asian American, and Pacific Islander (API) Advisory Council; the Black Advisory Council (BAC); the Hispanic, Latino, and Latinx Advisory Council; the Native American Advisory Council in North America; and the Black, Asian, Minority Ethnic (BAME) group in EMEA. Each group plays a central role in helping to ensure that our company’s progress is rooted in the real experiences of our diverse employees. They work in partnership with our global D&I teams to help advocate for and promote the authentic implementation of systemic change to ensure personal wellness and professional equity. We have also established monthly employee roundtable forums to encourage education and empathy, further build community, and empower our teams to mobilise action for meaningful impact. In addition, to be able to understand the unique needs and priorities of our people, we have enhanced our employee surveys with a more robust focus on diversity, equity, and inclusion.
Strengthen Structured Education Practices
We have built on the formal unconscious bias and microaggression training we started in 2018. Part two of our mandatory D&I training—Respect and Inclusion: Allyship and Advocacy—was completed by all managers in July 2020 and our entire employee population in December 2020. Going forward, completion of this training is required for all new hires, company-wide. We have substantially expanded our D&I educational and engagement programming across all heritage months and days. Leaning into the importance of representation and dialogue, we launched a Black Speaker Series, inviting external thought leaders and public figures to share their wisdom and personal and professional experiences with our employees. We have also developed comprehensive resource libraries for allyship and education that are always available to employees in their daily roles.
Community
Examine How We Portray the American Dream and Use Our Brand Voice
With our Advisory Councils and Employee Groups, and as perhaps our greatest responsibility, we are closely reexamining our brand’s unique role in portraying the American dream—from the concepts we ideate to the tangible products we create to the imagery we promote. We’re focused on diversifying our brand storytelling, committing to represent Black talent in at least 20% of our brand marketing and advertising on owned digital channels in aggregate during the calendar year.
Forging New Creative Partnerships
We will also be investing in Black, African, and African American creative partners—including the content creators in front of and behind the camera as well as Black-owned media platforms, all of which are vital in bringing our vision to life.
Hold Our Network Accountable
In July 2020, we reviewed our media partners to ensure the platforms we conduct business through operate in a way that aligns to our values and D&I standards. We also developed a set of diversity expectations for all partners.
Connect With Consumers
Detailed analyses of our Black, African, and African American consumer composition and their perceptions and expectations of our brand are taking place to inform our cross-functional business strategies. In an effort to spark dialogue among our teams, we created a tangible, evergreen symbol of allyship and solidarity with the Black, African, and African American communities. Conceived and designed by our employees, for our employees, the Ralph Lauren Pin of Solidarity is intended as a gateway for meaningful conversation and understanding. It will be available to our customers soon.
Support Nonprofit Organisations
We’re strengthening our employee volunteering efforts with organisations that support Black, African, and African American communities and communities of colour. More broadly, via our internal Matching Gift program, our employees’ donations to the causes and nonprofits they care about are eligible to be matched by the Ralph Lauren Corporate Foundation.
Society
Advance Social Justice
We designated four CEO Action for Racial Equity fellows—delegates from our company who are temporarily stepping away from their roles to create large-scale impact for racial equity and justice by advancing public policy reform at the US local, state, and federal levels, full-time. These employees are working in concert with representatives from more than 100 companies in the CEO Action network to mobilise election, health care, technology access, and public safety reform. In the areas around our largest American facilities—New Jersey, New York, and North Carolina—we started opening dialogues with public works bureaus, nonprofits, district attorney offices, school districts, and police and sheriff departments. Those conversations turned into opportunities for sharing our diversity, equity, inclusion, and anti-racism trainings and resources.
Deepen Our Partnerships and Invest in Education
We have deepened our relationships with existing partners like The Access Project, Phi Beta Sigma, and UNCF. Additionally, we donated more than $100,000 in scholarship funds to academic programs supporting students of colour, and we are developing mentorship and talent pipelines with HBCUs and historically Black sororities and fraternities. Through our involvement in the Open To All campaign, we are open-sourcing our D&I training materials to public safety agencies, schools, and businesses. And in the areas around our largest American facilities—New Jersey, New York, and North Carolina—we are developing relationships with and conducting diversity, equity, and inclusion trainings for public works bureaus, nonprofits, district attorney offices, school districts, and police and sheriff departments. We are also exploring ways to increase our support for Asian, Asian American, and Pacific Islander communities, including but not limited to our existing relationship with Asian Americans for Equality, Asian & Pacific Islander American Scholars, and the Asian University for Women in Bangladesh. Our work is far from being complete, and we approach all of this with intentionality and humility. We are on a journey and do not claim to have the perfect playbook or all of the right answers. But we will continue to accelerate our pace of progress, and we will take action today, tomorrow, and into a better future.
This page was last updated on May 26, 2021, and will continue to be updated as we progress on our work.