5 Ways to Remove Unconscious Bias From Your Hiring Process
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Today's Question: How does your company ensure its recruiting and hiring processes are as bias-free as possible?
1. Don't Limit Yourself to Certain Schools
A lot of companies in the San Francisco Bay Area corner themselves by hiring from Ivy League and upper-echelon schools only. This may seem like a strong move, but it prevents companies from building strong and diverse cultures. Yes, Stanford has an excellent MBA program, but the curriculum is strikingly similar to the MBA program at California State University, East Bay, where the student body is rich in diversity and reflects the community of the Bay Area.
Try to think outside of the box. Remember that there are thousands of highly qualified people who may have taken different paths toward education or experience. Most people aren't fortunate enough to go to Stanford or University of California, Berkeley, but they are just as ready, qualified, and eager as their counterparts.
— Dave Lopes, Badger Maps
— Marc Prosser, Fit Small Business
5. Do as Much Assessment as Possible Before the In-Person Interview
It is neither wise nor usually possible to avoid an in-person interview before making a hire, but I think it does level the playing field if you do as much evaluation as you can before that in-person interview. This evaluation might take the form of phone interviews, email questionnaires, or do-at-home tests. (This is good practice anyway, because these processes usually take less of your time than the in-person interview. It is a more efficient way to winnow the field.)
As the one who hires, it is possible that I might glean clues as to the ethnicity of a candidate and subconsciously exhibit bias. The only way I know to fight that is to have a meta-awareness of the issue and make sure I resist facile assumptions. What I fear more, frankly, is a bias that is talked about less often – bias on the basis of personal attractiveness. Having the first interview be on the phone helps mitigate that.
— William Gadea, IdeaRocket