Best Of Intentions

Cynthia Mitchell has finally gotten a great management opportunity at AgFunds, a Houston-based company that provides financial services to farmers and farmer-owned cooperatives. Frank Romans, regional vice president, has recruited Cynthia to revive the Arkansas district, which has been losing customers for years. The sales force there isn't bad; it's just been poorly managed by an indifferent boss for too long. Still, Cynthia knows she'll need at least one powerhouse sales rep to get things back on track. She thinks she's found that person in Steve Ripley, this year's top trainee at AgFunds, who is inexplicably available three months after the training period is over. In the interview, he proves to be ambitious, intelligent, and personable. But several of Cynthia's colleagues suggest that Steve might not be the best fit for the job: He's a black man in a company whose customer base is mostly conservative and white. Uncomfortably recalling her own experiences at AgFunds--she'd been rejected for a position in a territory that was deemed too unfriendly to female sales representatives--Cynthia addresses the issue with Frank. The mostly white farmers in Cynthia's district just won't trust their books to a black professional, Frank explains. And other minority professionals at AgFunds have derailed their careers trying to make inroads in unfriendly districts. "Steve deserves to start out in a more hospitable district. Once the right opportunity opens up, he'll be hired, and he'll do brilliantly," Frank reassures Cynthia, but she's still uncertain. By ignoring her customers' biases and hiring Steve, did she possibly set him up to fail? Or would it have been better to let Steve wait for a friendlier opportunity?

The world's increasing globalization requires more intera ...
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