Edelman’s fourth year producing the Trust Barometer Special Report on Business and Racial Justice reveals a serious failure of leadership to execute on the promises made in the wake of the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis in May 2020. Concerns about racism in the U.S. are escalating, with 69 percent of Americans worried about racism, up 8 points from the 61 percent last year — the highest since the 79 percent registered in our June 2020 report.
None of the major institutions, from Business to Government to NGOs to Media, are trusted by a majority of citizens to solve the problem of racism and racial injustice. No industry sector is seen as doing well in this regard, with the worst performing sectors being financial services (33 percent) and pharmaceuticals (37 percent). The findings from our 2023 Edelman Trust Barometer in January told us that our leaders are seen as divisive instead of healers; by a three to one margin, government leaders are seen as pulling us apart instead of unifying us.
Importantly, there is a profound disconnection between the executive team — executive director levels and above —and the rest of the company on racial issues. Here are the harsh truths from our study:
The result of the disconnect is a stunning rejection of the C-suite as a credible voice on DE&I. The CEO is trusted to tell the truth about racism in their company by only 15 percent of associates. Only 28 percent of associates trust their direct supervisor to tell the truth about racism. The trust abyss on racism in the company is similar for the mid-level employee, only 24 percent trust the CEO and 31 percent trust their direct supervisor. Indeed, the only group that does trust the CEO in this regard is the executive class.
This is a call for help and a demand for action. The steps business must consider taking are:
In sum: We need to recommit to action and recognize racial justice and DEI as the most important trust challenge for Corporate America. In our 2023 Edelman Trust Barometer global report, we found that My Employer is trusted more so than any institution at 78 percent, leading Business in general at 62 percent, NGOs at 59 percent, government at 50 percent, and media at 50 percent. It is key that it takes this license and puts it to good use by driving real change across their organizations and America.
Richard Edelman is CEO.