By Mike  Swift
Mercury  News
Posted: 05/19/2009
In Silicon Valley, "Asian" and  "success" often seem synonymous.
Asians  lead all racial groups in levels of education and income, and they are a  quarter or more of undergraduates at elite universities like Stanford and the  University of California-Berkeley. Last week, the Census Bureau said  
But an  eye-opening first-of-its-kind "census" of local executives shows that  while Asians make up more than a third of the work force at some of Silicon  Valley's biggest tech companies, they are far less prominent in the boardroom  or the highest executive offices: Asians represent about 6 percent of board  members and about 10 percent of corporate officers of the Bay Area's 25 largest  companies.
Among  the 25 largest Bay Area companies by revenue, 12 had no Asian board members,  and five had no Asian corporate officers, according to the new study. Despite  the growing prominence of Asians at Silicon Valley tech companies — Asians are  least 23 percent of the work force at Cisco Systems, Intel, Sun Microsystems,  eBay and Advanced Micro Devices, according to a Mercury News review of  documents filed with the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission — they  have made no gains in the share of seats on the boards of large tech companies  since 1999.
"There  is an underlying belief in the Asian community that there is a corporate glass  ceiling," said Buck Gee, a retired Cisco vice president and former Silicon  Valley CEO who co-authored the study. He and Wes Hom, a retired IBM vice  president who was also the senior chair of the company's Asian Diversity Task  Force program, built their survey from company data on Web sites and SEC  filings from the third quarter of 2008. "This has been talked about in the  Asian community for a long time."
Gee  began asking where all the Asian CEOs were back in 2006, when the resignation  of two Chinese vice presidents caused him take a look around at Cisco. To his  shock, he realized he was the only Chinese vice president in the 
"I  thought, 'That can't be right,' " Gee said. But it was.
Asians  are better represented among the leadership of Bay Area companies compared with  all Fortune 500 companies, Gee and Hom say, but the Bay Area also has the  highest percentage Asian population among the nation's big metro areas. They  place much of the blame for Asian non-advancement not on big companies, but on  limiting factors within Asian culture and the failure of Asian executives to  mentor talented younger colleagues.
"It's  mostly our fault,"
Gee said  of the small numbers of Asians at the helm of the Bay Area's biggest companies.  "It's mostly up to us to figure out the skills we need to develop, and to  get those skills."
The  issue is front and center at a forum today at The Indus Entrepreneurs in 
Gee and  Hom and a small group of executives are organizing a Corporate Executive  Initiative, hoping to work with Bay Area companies to foster the career  development of promising younger Asian workers.
The  executive census and a related paper — "The Failure of Asian Success in  the Bay Area" — say several social factors hold Asian managers back,  including cultural deference to superiors, which U.S. managers may view as a  worker lacking confidence or knowledge; a lack of strong English skills; and a  failure of some Asian workers to invest enough effort in networking.
While  East Asian cultures and educational systems tend to encourage technical  excellence and respect for authority, they may not do as good a job developing  leadership and communication skills, Gee and Hom say.
"The culture says you don't have to raise your hand — just do a good job," Hom said.
Among  the 100 largest Bay Area companies, Gee and Hom found 13 Asian CEOs. But six  were the founders of their company.
The list  of companies without Asian corporate officers includes Apple, AMD and Symantec, according to the study. The list  of companies without an Asian board member includes Intel, Oracle, Chevron,  eBay and Symantec.
Given  the high-profile successes of a few Asian entrepreneurs like Yahoo cofounder Jerry Yang, and with so many Asians who  are mid-level managers, the lack of top executives is "a problem hidden in  plain view," the study says.
"Everybody  agrees this is the case, but very few Asians are willing to come out and make a  stink about it," said Jane Hyun, an executive coach and multicultural  leadership strategist, and the author of "The Bamboo Ceiling," a 2005  book about the limits on Asian career advancement. "You don't see an Asian  Al Sharpton-type figure out there. You don't see people making waves that we  haven't really reached these positions."
Cisco,  which has one Asian board member, is trying to unearth the management talents  of its Asian workers.
The  company has created a "Cisco Asian Affinity Network," which helps  employees develop their business, communication and influence skills.  "Diversity and inclusion is a top priority for Cisco," said spokesman  Ken Lotich, echoing the statements of many companies.
Hyun and  others say the situation is not limited to business. At 
Gee and  Hom say their goal is to launch a dialogue about how Asians can fully  contribute their business talents.
Nevertheless,  Hyun said 
"Organizations  want you to demonstrate leadership in a certain way," Hyun said. 
"There  is definitely a pressure to be like the senior leaders that are already in  place."
Source: http://www.mercurynews.com/breakingnews/ci_12404879?nclick_check=1
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