News

LGBTQ-Friendly Firms More Innovative

The quantity and quality of patents in large US firms gets a boost when they score highly across LGBTQ-friendly metrics.
Two flags at Aalto University: a pride flag and a yellow flag. A modern building and green trees are in the background.
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, the study found. Image: Mikko Raskinen / Aalto University

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.

Three people standing outdoors in front of greenery. One wears a grey suit, one a beige blazer and stripes, and one a navy blazer.
Jukka Sihvonen from Aalto University (left) with Veda Fatmy and Sami Vähämaa from the University of Vaasa.

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
Pride flags

New research: Companies with LGBT-friendly policies perform better

LGBT‐friendly corporate policies enhance firm performance, according to new research from the School of Business and the University of Vaasa.

News
  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Doctoral researcher Giiguulen Enkhsaikhan in a laboratory environment
Research & Art Published:

Giiguulen Enkhsaikhan: More sustainable textiles with hemicellulose

Aalto University's doctoral researcher's presentation of hemicellulose won the third prize in the Marcus Wallenberg Young Researchers’ Challenge event in November
Two world maps showing trends in income inequality from 1990 to 2023, with national and subnational data in different colours.
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

Subnational income inequality revealed: Regional successes may hold key to addressing widening gap globally

Income inequality is one of the most important measures of economic health, social justice and quality of life
Research & Art Published:

Changes to education information in ACRIS

We are updating how education information is managed in Aalto University's research information system, ACRIS. The old source data for education information will be removed to help eliminate potential duplicate entries.
A modern school building with a playground, surrounded by greenery under a partly cloudy sky.
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

Study: Wood is a more cost-effective building material than concrete when emissions are monetized

The costs of the wood-built school and sports hall in Myrskylä were compared to a reinforced concrete alternative — and wood proved clearly more economical when environmental impacts were assigned a monetary value.