(Reuters)
- Women executives left Yahoo Inc (YHOO.O) U.S. operations at an
unusually high rate after the technology company announced plans to sell
itself earlier this year, but it was not immediately clear why,
according to the company's 2016 diversity report, released on Monday.
The sharp drop comes as Silicon Valley faces pressure to diversify a workforce heavily dominated by white and Asian men.
The
last year has been turbulent for the web pioneer, which in February
announced it would explore alternatives and put in motion a plan to cut
about 15 percent of its workforce. In July, it struck a $4.8 billion
deal to sell its core internet businesses to Verizon Communications Inc
(VZ.N).
The
number of women in Yahoo leadership roles in the United States slipped
to 21 percent as of June 30, down from 23 percent the year before, the
report showed. Women in non-technical jobs remained flat at 52 percent.
The total number of women at Yahoo in the United States remained steady
at 31 percent.
Yahoo had 8,800 employees at the end of the second quarter, down from 9,400 as at March 31.
It
was not clear why there was such a marked decline in the proportion of
women leaders at Yahoo, which is led by Silicon Valley's most powerful
female CEO, Marissa Mayer.
"Women
leaders organically left because other opportunities were more
appropriate for them," said Margenett Moore-Roberts, Yahoo's global head
of diversity and inclusion. She said most of the women executives who
left did so voluntarily after the plan to sell the core company was
announced.
She
said Yahoo will use a combination of internal searches and promotions,
outside recruitment and partnerships with women-focused tech
organizations to balance the losses.
The
dip in women executives does not seem to be mirrored at other major
tech companies. Women held 28 percent of leadership positions at Apple
Inc (AAPL.O), according to its latest figures, unchanged from the year
before.

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