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News & Insight

View RALI news and insights to keep up to date with the latest on trend developments relating to future leadership capability and experience requirements and the future world of work.

To give employees flexibility, some companies have experimented with a four-day workweek. But what if instead of shortening the workweek, they shortened the work day, giving employees back a few hours at a time? That’s a question that employers …

1st Mar 2021 | 09:00am

One in 10 people are living with a mental health diagnosis, and likely someone you work with or manage every day. The global pandemic, social unrest, strain on the economy, remote work and everything in between that we experienced in 2020 likely caused…

1st Mar 2021 | 08:00am

The New Way We Work podcast launched in January, and over the last several weeks we’ve  been looking at race in the workplace. We’ve talked to racial equity consultant Dorianne St Fleur about what companies get wrong about DEI; Porte…

1st Mar 2021 | 07:00am

Seven years ago, executive wellness coach Naz Beheshti had a dream. In it, her former boss, Steve Jobs, gave her one last assignment. “He appeared and simply and clearly—the way he always spoke to me in life—just told me that I nee…

1st Mar 2021 | 06:00am

Routines are to our time what budgets are to our money. We adhere to them to spend our time wisely. But, while routines can provide us with a sense of control, especially during a pandemic and ensuing unpredictability, they can also grow to take up the…

1st Mar 2021 | 05:00am

Feelings are hard work—if the past year has taught me anything, it’s that. And the work of managing feelings is an important part of many jobs. One of my professors used to call that “emotional labor.”
The term “emoti…

28th Feb 2021 | 05:00am

At the moment, I’m feeling overwhelmed, torn in many different directions, and it occurs to me that I need to implement more discipline in my life. But the word creates mixed emotions for me.
Whenever I hear the word “discipline,” …

27th Feb 2021 | 05:00am

Last summer, after the killing of George Floyd and national protests, PayPal made a $530 million commitment to support Black- and minority-owned businesses and fight economic inequality.

In a conversation for Fast Company’s video series, “The Work in Progress,” PayPal CEO Dan Schulman and executive vice president of global sales Peggy Alford confirmed the company has increased its commitment to $535 million and discussed how the allocation of those funds is going.

“We invested in venture companies that invest in people of color, in Black-owned businesses and entrepreneurs to help that gap that exists as well,” says Schulman. “We’ve already put into place well north of $300 million today.”

The company has dedicated $15 million to a PayPal Empowerment Grant program, in direct support of Black-owned businesses. “Forty percent of Black-owned businesses were going under,” says Schulman. “So these grants—which were not loans—were one of the things that was like, ‘here’s money to get through this moment.’”

Alford says that they’ve also been soliciting feedback from employees about how to most effectively disburse the funds. “When we made the [original] $530 million commitment, what we realized is that we were going to need to rely on the expertise of our employees, [who] come from communities across the world.”

WATCH: How PayPal is actually closing the racial wealth gap

Schulman also discussed a 2019 initiative to boost the pay of the company’s hourly and entry-level employees, after realizing that many struggled to afford basic living expenses.

He and his team raised pay for the company’s most in-need employees so they met a net disposable income (NDI) goal of 16%, which would rise to 20% by the end of 2021. “I think financial health is a bedrock or a foundation of so many things,” says Schulman. “We decided that the minimum NDI inside the company needed to be 20%, because if we had 20% NDI, [an employee] could save and didn’t have to choose between putting food on the table or healthcare benefits.”

To achieve this goal, PayPal cut healthcare costs by 60%, raised pay, gave shareholder equity to all of its employees, and provided a company-wide financial education program to encourage healthy spending and saving practices.

Financial health and inclusion are part of the mission of PayPal—values that its leadership considers a moral imperative, he says, and which they hope will propel the financial-tech company to its goal of one billion users. “We need to step up, every one of us, because we don’t live isolated from the environments that we all live in and work in,” says Schulman. “We’re all part of the same community.”

He says he has been thinking about these standards since his first day in 2014. “The mission we defined . . . was basically ‘How do we help democratize financial services?’ Which basically is a fancy way of saying, ‘How do we allow everyone to manage and move money inexpensively, quickly, so that money management and movement isn’t a right for the affluent—but it’s a right for everybody?’ And our primary value is ‘How do we become a company that is more inclusive and supports diversity?’ Because our mission is diverse by its very nature.”

Alford says that Schulman’s approach to incorporating diversity is baked in. “One of the things that I really like about Dan’s leadership is that he views diversity as the representation you need in order to serve your customers well across the world. A goal that we have through this commitment is that it will inspire others to actually commit to capital, along with us. Not just words, but capital.”

26th Feb 2021 | 06:30pm

The latest retro RPG for Nintendo Switch should score well with genre fans, but probably won’t win many fresh converts

26th Feb 2021 | 05:47pm

Three common traps and how to avoid them.

26th Feb 2021 | 01:15pm