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September 2016 - The Diversity Issue

DSNews delivers stories, ideas, links, companies, people, events, and videos impacting the mortgage default servicing industry.

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94 at's a quote from Zach Oppenheimer, senior vice president and head of customer engagement at Fannie Mae, from earlier this year. In a short look at the changing face of the American borrower, Fannie Mae stated that by 2024, somewhere in the neighborhood of 5 million new U.S. households formed‒‒a third of the overall number‒‒will be Hispanic households. Moreover, Millennials will drive most of the growth and new household formations will be driven by greater numbers of ethnic and racial minorities, who will be much more technologically advanced than borrowers of the past. But that's just racial and ethic diversity. e mortgage market of the very-near future is going to include a much broader sweep of cultural diversity, gender diversity, age diversity, religious diversity, and diversity in sexual orientation and identity. People in all these categories‒‒many who will fit into more than one‒‒will begin to enter into the market at an accelerated rate. In short, the American borrower is diversifying at rapid speed, and the mortgage servicing industry needs to approach them smartly. For Cheryl Travis-Johnson, executive vice president and COO of VRM Mortgage Services and member of the American Mortgage Diversity Council (AMDC), reaching the borrower of the future starts with shifting away from the word "diversity" and toward the word "inclusion." DIVERSITY VS. INCLUSION Say "diversity" to a business, Travis- Johnson says, and it's likely to be translated into something like "affirmative action"‒‒a well-meaning attempt to open up jobs to people who don't fit the WASP male mold that puts a lot of businesspeople off. Push too hard to diversify, and mortgage company managers will feel coerced into certain hiring and promotion actions. e goal should be to make inclusion a normal aspect of the hiring and sourcing process through making sure all qualified applicants and suppliers have access to opportunities. Business I N D U S T R Y I N S I G H T / S C O T T M O R G A N BUILDING THE BEST TEAM "Borrowers of the future will be substantially different than those from past generations."

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