Sharing Works
At Sempra Energy, diversity is more than a catchword,
it's a point of view that reflects a corporate commitment
about respect, and that includes people of all races, colors, creeds
and interests. Sempra Energy doesn't just support diversity,
however, it pursues it—not just because it improves the quality
of life for our customers, neighbors and employees, but because
it adds to the success of the business.
"An appreciation for diversity is deeply integrated into
our corporate principles and practices," says Joyce Rowland,
Sempra Energy's senior vice president of Human Resources.
"We think of it as a 'three-legged stool' that—by
design—encompasses our approach to the hiring and promotion
of our employees, our supplier-diversity efforts, and our charitable
donations and volunteer involvement in communities where we live
and work."
Leg one: Corporate
Diversity Affairs
"Of course, we want to attract women and minorities into the
workforce, but we want to attract the best candidates from all backgrounds,"
explains Shawn Farrar, the new director of Corporate Diversity Affairs.
"We want Sempra Energy to be a place where everyone feels
welcome and that is an attractive place to work for people of all
different groups."
Today, the company has largely achieved the goal of having its
employees reflect the makeup of the communities it serves. Blacks,
Hispanics, Asians and other non-Caucasians make up just more than
50 percent of the workforce. Women and minorities make up a major
portion of the company's leadership as well.
Leg two: Diverse Business
Enterprises
Sempra Energy's office of Diverse Business Enterprises (DBE)
focuses on another aspect of diversity. It's geared to opening
the door to businesses owned by minorities, women and service-disabled
veterans, and helping them compete to supply a wide range of materials
and contract services to San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E)
and Southern California Gas Co. (SoCalGas), Sempra Energy's
California utilities.
Frank Urtasun, the DBE's new director, points out that Sempra
Energy's Supplier Diversity programs, like its workforce-diversity
programs, have received national honors for their success.
"Our focus is on helping diverse, usually smaller businesses,
gain an understanding of how to work with us and become suppliers,"
Urtasun says. "We understand that for a small business, it
can be daunting to deal with the procurement process at a big company
like SDG&E or SoCalGas."
That effort translates into finding potential suppliers, reaching
out to them with information and training, and helping them through
the process of qualifying as a supplier.
"Our employees do an outstanding job in finding potential
DBE suppliers—many of which are highly competitive with other
firms seeking to do business with us," he adds.
Last year, SDG&E and SoCalGas purchased just under $200 million
in goods and services from DBE firms, about 24 percent of the total
amount they spent on such contracts. Urtasun credits the success
to a commitment to supplier diversity that's "ingrained
in the culture of the corporation."
Leg three: diversity
of giving
The final leg in that 'three-legged-stool' approach to diversity
is the company's charitable-giving programs, and employee volunteer
efforts and donations. Last year, Sempra Energy and its employees
invested more than $10 million and more than 50,000 volunteer hours
in a diverse array of community groups.
Molly Cartmill, Sempra Energy's director of Community Relations
& Corporate Events, says one of the things that makes Sempra
Energy and its companies unique is the way they track diversity
of giving.
"We ask organizations to tell us the diversity and characteristics
of the audience that will be reached through the programs and projects
we fund," she says. "We don't assume that organizations only serve one
ethnic group, or a group of people that represent just one aspect
of diversity. We ask them to define who they serve, and that's
how we track diversity of giving. This creates balance in our corporate
giving."
And that means that money and support went to household names like the Red Cross, but also
to less well-known groups ranging from the Black Youth Leadership
Project to the Native American Council, and from Museo Sol Del Nino
to the Asian-Pacific American Legal Center—and many more.