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Deloitte & Touche USA LLP Named a 2007 Working Mother Best Company for Multicultural WomenNEW YORK – May 25, 2007—Working Mother magazine today announced that Deloitte & Touche USA LLP is a 2007 Best Company for Multicultural Women. Now in its fifth year, the Working Mother Best Companies for Multicultural Women initiative celebrates employers that have established sustainable, effective, and groundbreaking diversity and inclusion practices which encourage the attraction and advancement of African-American, Hispanic, Asian-American and Native American women. “Deloitte is making a difference in the way corporate America views diversity and its multicultural employees,” said Suzanne Riss, Editor in Chief, Working Mother magazine. “They’re holding managers accountable for helping workplace diversity thrive. We have the good fortune to live in one of the most culturally rich countries in the world, and Deloitte recognizes that this richness is a workplace asset. Harnessing the wealth of talents and perspectives that people of different backgrounds have to offer is helping Deloitte excel in our increasingly global and competitive world. Deloitte is truly leading by example.” Profiled in the June issue of Working Mother magazine, Deloitte is recognized for its unique programs for multicultural women. They include:
The complete 2007 Best Companies for Multicultural Women—including profiles of the winning companies and more stories on diversity in corporate America—appears in the June issue of Working Mother, now available on newsstands. Methodology Working Mother selected the 2007 Working Mother Best Companies for Multicultural Women based on the detailed application completed by each company. Private and public firms based in the United States are eligible to apply for the initiative. Companies supplied 2006 data about hiring, pay and promotion of multicultural employees. Application questions cover workforce profile (such as number of women of color, women in top positions, top earners); culture (programs for women of color, manager behavior); external programs (diversity activities); and work/life programs (child care, elder care, time off following childbirth). This year, Working Mother gave the most weight to questions involving representation, recruitment and retention of women of color.
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