I agree with minority and woman hiring and promoting at Fidelity. We all want people to succeed.
BUT... The push to have under represented minorities and women is putting a lot of low talent people into roles that are above their heads. Everyone who has to work for them knows this is true.
For example, a female 'automates' a procedure that requires around 20 steps and a manual to follow to make work. Her 'automation' requires some programming tweaks each month. For example, each new month of data requires some additional work so it knows what to do with the new date elements. She gets celebrated and groomed for promotion. A total midwit doing below average work does the happy dance while everyone who works with her knows that her work is below average. I can automate a solution that takes no additional programming steps as it was designed to integrate new data elements into the data flow. I just get more work handed to me. No promotion.
Another example. A black man I worked with, who I think is a hard worker and produces end work that is reliably accurate, got promoted over more deserving candidates recently (not me, btw, I didn't apply). Here's the thing... The management he works for are other less than stellar BIPOC who have no clue about data management and structure. He structures all his data, which is a lot actually, horizontally instead of vertically in Excel. Everything requires loads of work whenever anything new is added. Formulas are all over the place. The monthly workload gets heavier as new elements are always needed and added each month. He just got promoted to director... A role he is wholly unsuited for.
The double standards are ridiculous and it is all over Fidelity. This trend needs to be reversed or it will definitely turn Fidelity into a ghost ship.