Earlier today, Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot updated his employees about a recent company-wide survey regarding the status of reforms following a summer complaints about harassment, misconduct, and other systemic issues at the global video game publisher
He did so in a message that was shared with Kotaku not by current employees but by Ubisoft PR. In the message, Guillemot points out that 25% of anonymous respondents to the summer survey reported witnessing or experiencing misconduct first-hand. In addition, one in five respondents said they didnât feel âfully respected or safe in the work environment.â Ubisoft says the survey was conducted by an independent research firm.
In addition, women at Ubisoftt were 30% more likely than men to experience, witness, or hear about discimination, while non-binary employees were 43% more likely. One of the goals outlined by Guillemot to deal with this includes âensuring women comprise at least 24% of Ubisoftâs teams by 2023 (compared to 22% today). Based on the nearly 19,000 employees Guillemot mentioned being in charge of in his message, that would mean an increase of approximately 380 women. The CEO said the company is currently working on other metrics to measure progress on fostering diversity as well.
One interesting development the message mentions is the creation of a new âreview committeeâ to look at Ubisoftâs content and product marketing to make sure itâs âaligned with our values of respect and fairness.â It certainly sounds like the company is creating an extra set of eyes to prevent yet another âwhereâs female Eivorâ moment after a summer full of them. Just last month, Ubisoft released an Assassinâs Creed sizzle reel that left out all the seriesâ playable female characters. The month before that it released a Tom Clancy mobile game that used imagery associated with this yearâs Black Lives Matter protests to depict an in-game terrorist group
While there werenât a lot of firm details in todayâs message to employees, it did continue a now wellestablished trend of the company waiting until the end of the week to share information about problems at its workplaces. Just two weeks ago, Ubisoft announced on September 18 that 30-year veteran developer Michel Ancel would be leaving the video game industry, only for a report to come out a week later exposing the fact that Ancel is currently under investigation for his alleged toxic leadership at the studio making Beyond Good and Evil 2 something Ancel has denied. What will next Friday bring?