LGBTQ-friendly firms are more innovative

#1
C C Offline
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar...via%3Dihub

PRESS RELEASE: LGBTQ-friendly policies can have a significant impact on innovation in major US firms, according to new research from Aalto University and the University of Vaasa. Existing studies have found a link between profitability and workplace diversity more generally, yet this is the first to specifically examine sexuality and gender-inclusivity as it relates to innovation.

Researchers used scores from the Corporate Equality Index (CEI) in conjunction with data from the US Patent and Trademark Office and public databases — on patent counts, citations, quality and the number of innovators in a firm — to evaluate the relationship between LGBTG-friendliness and innovation.

The findings were notable: for every standard deviation increase in a company’s CEI, the number of patents increased by 20 percent. LGBTQ-friendly firms also demonstrated an almost 25 percent increase in the number of patent citations (an indication of how other companies value the innovativeness of a patent).

‘Our results demonstrate that firms with progressive LGBTQ policies produce more patents, have more patent citations, and have higher innovation quality as measured by patent originality, generality, and internationality,’ says Jukka Sihvonen, from Aalto University School of Business.

The study spans from 2003-2017 and was just published this week in the peer-reviewed International Review of Financial Analysis. Furthermore, the research team has also processed additional data up until 2024, with indications that the positive trend may be intensifying over time, notes co-author Veda Fatmy, from the University of Vaasa.

Findings ‘not just a blue state phenomenon’. A range of analytical methods were used to control for bias, with a link between inclusivity and innovation presenting regardless of the differing political or societal context.

‘It’s not as politically polarised as one might think,’ says Sami Vähämaa, who also led the research. ‘The results get marginally stronger when most conservative states are excluded, but the difference is really minor, and the findings remain largely the same when the most liberal states are left out.’

‘This is not just a blue state phenomenon,’ adds Sihvonen. With diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) currently a subject of immense controversy in the US, the research brings crucial data to discussions around the impact of corporate policy in shaping effective business strategies.

‘Innovation is the fuel that drives both growth and profitability. Companies need innovation,’ says Sihvonen. ‘The magnitudes of impact linked to LGBTQ-friendliness are big — and that means that the economic significance is too.’

The full study ‘LGBTQ-friendly employee policies and corporate innovation’, published 16 June, 2025, is available here.

See also the team’s 2022 study on the link between stock market valuation, financial performance and LGBTQ-friendly policies.
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#2
confused2 Offline
Possibly just that friendly firms work better anyway. Straight white supremacists may not always be the brightest folks around.
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#3
Syne Offline
Sounds like the causality may be reversed. Do they eliminate the possibility that large, successful companies are more prone to pander to LGBT policies, since studies have shown that leftist customers respond to virtue-signaling?
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#4
Magical Realist Online
Quote:‘Our results demonstrate that firms with progressive LGBTQ policies produce more patents, have more patent citations, and have higher innovation quality as measured by patent originality, generality, and internationality,’ says Jukka Sihvonen, from Aalto University School of Business.

It makes sense that open-mindedness regarding sexual orientation and alternative lifestyles would translate into open-mindedness in other areas as well, like other innovating possibilities and multicultural ideas. "Live and let live" is the essence of creativity and originality in business and technology. Indeed of capitalism itself!
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#5
confused2 Offline
Syne Wrote:Sounds like the causality may be reversed. Do they eliminate the possibility that large, successful companies are more prone to pander to LGBT policies, since studies have shown that leftist customers respond to virtue-signaling?
You're suggesting that a company can unintentionally become 'more successful' by responding to leftist (customer) pressure where 'more successful' is defined as
OP Wrote:‘Innovation [as] is the fuel that drives both growth and profitability.
From an employee point of view it probably makes no difference why the company is 'inclusive' - if it works it works. Not good news for straight whites - maybe they need to re-count the number of patents granted.
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#6
Syne Offline
No, I'm saying that companies that are already larger and more commercially successful are probably more likely to be responsive to market research that has shown that leftists are more prone to buy from businesses that pander to their politics. So the innovation is likely an indicator of market responsiveness, which then led to the policies.
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#7
confused2 Offline
The following seems to suggest the rate of innovation increases with 'CEI' rather than starting and remaining as innovative regardless of CEI. Just my reading of the following..
OP Wrote:The findings were notable: for every standard deviation increase in a company’s CEI, the number of patents increased by 20 percent. LGBTQ-friendly firms also demonstrated an almost 25 percent increase in the number of patent citations (an indication of how other companies value the innovativeness of a patent).
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#8
Syne Offline
They only seem to be comparing these after the fact. So it doesn't seem to distinguish which came first, only that they are correlated.
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#9
confused2 Offline
From the paper cited by CC..
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar...via%3Dihub

Quote:The second related strand of innovation literature focuses on employee-friendly policies and employment non-discrimination acts. Chen, Chen, et al. (2016) and Chen, Leung, and Evans (2016) document that employee-friendly firms invest more in research and development and have greater innovation output as measured by the number of patents and patent citations.

More investment gets more patents. So may have nothing to do with friendliness .. I suspect it does but I don't think that is shown here in any convincing way.
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