The Mercury News

Job fair matches black students with Silicon Valley’s tech giants

Organizers say event addresses industry’s lack of diversity

- By Nico Savidge nsavidge@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN JOSE » Like a lot of job fairs on college campuses, the event that brought tech industry recruiters to San Jose State University on Saturday had plenty of eager students and companybra­nded swag: Amazon foam footballs, ebay water bottles and Salesforce socks.

But unlike a lot of tech industry job fairs — and unlike Silicon Valley itself, which has long been criticized for its lack of diversity — most of the prospectiv­e employees, and the recruiters from some of the sector’s biggest firms, were African American.

“It’s really cool to see that, to see representa­tion at all of these companies like Facebook, Apple,

Salesforce,” said Harrison Peters, a sophomore finance major at Santa Clara University who is on the hunt for a summer internship. “You don’t know what you want until you see it, in a sense.”

Organizers of Saturday’s African-american Career Fair, where about 90 local college students and graduates met with recruiters from a dozen tech firms, described it as one step toward addressing the stubborn problems Silicon Valley has had in recruiting and retaining black workers.

“We have seen an explosion of opportunit­y that tech has created in the global economy for some,” said Rep. Ro Khanna, Dsanta Clara, whose office put on the event.

Meanwhile, Khanna added, “There are a lot of people in East San Jose and South San Jose that haven’t had the opportunit­y to even visit places like Apple and Google, let alone to

work there.”

Industrywi­de, less than 7% of tech employees in 2015 were black, according to a 2017 Government Accountabi­lity Office study, which found that the percentage had not significan­tly changed in the previous decade.

Just 2.9% of Salesforce’s workers in the United States identify as black, according to Tony Prophet, the company’s chief equity officer, who spoke to students before the job fair began.

“We are not putting those data out there because we’re proud of them,” Prophet said. “We are putting those data out there to be held accountabl­e and to create a benchmark for the future.”

Several students said they appreciate­d being able to talk with recruiters in a smaller and more intimate setting, where they could learn more about what jobs the big tech firms are hiring for. At other job fairs he has attended, recent Columbia University graduate Robert Boyle said, things were a lot less personal.

“It was really just, ‘Give us your resume, and we’re not really going to talk to you because there’s a line of 50 people that are behind you,’ ” Boyle said. “This is definitely a much better opportunit­y.”

Charlotte Kaninda, a student in the informatic­s master’s program at San Jose State who has a bachelor’s degree in computer science, said she has applied for plenty of tech jobs and gone to other career fairs, but so far hasn’t received the type of offers she’d hoped to receive for full-time positions.

For now, Kaninda said, she is doing data analysis as a contract worker. As her search continues, Kaninda said she appreciate­d getting to talk with recruiters about how to improve her resume and, she hopes, stand out from crowds of other applicants.

“I know how well I work, how well I can do the job, and I’m thinking with the right opportunit­y I’ll do wonders,” Kaninda said. “At the end of the day, it’s about skills, but you might be overlooked for some reason — this is an opportunit­y for someone to take a second look.”

The fair was not just aimed at those students seeking jobs and internship­s. It also was an effort to reach tech companies, which might focus recruiting efforts on the small handful of elite colleges where well-connected students have a leg up in nabbing the industry’s highpaying jobs.

An institutio­n like San Jose State turns out plenty of graduates who have the skills those companies are looking for, President Mary Papazian and other university leaders noted, but they are much more likely to be people of color or the first in their family to go to college. So Khanna and others said they hope the fair becomes an annual tradition at San Jose State and other local colleges.

“Not all of the talent is at Stanford and MIT,” Khanna said.

 ?? ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Rep. Ro Khanna, D-santa Clara, chats with recruiters at the African-american Career Fair at San Jose State University on Saturday. The job fair, put on by Khanna’s office, drew about 90local college students and some of the biggest tech firms in Silicon Valley.
ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Rep. Ro Khanna, D-santa Clara, chats with recruiters at the African-american Career Fair at San Jose State University on Saturday. The job fair, put on by Khanna’s office, drew about 90local college students and some of the biggest tech firms in Silicon Valley.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ANDA CHU STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Rep. Ro Khanna, left, speaks with San Jose State student Devon Jones at the Africaname­rican Career Fair held at San Jose State on Saturday.
PHOTOS BY ANDA CHU STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Rep. Ro Khanna, left, speaks with San Jose State student Devon Jones at the Africaname­rican Career Fair held at San Jose State on Saturday.
 ??  ?? San Jose State student Victoria Wright speaks with a recruiter at the job fair.
San Jose State student Victoria Wright speaks with a recruiter at the job fair.

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