Candidates: Are you interviewing and need support?
Candidates: Are you interviewing and need support?
Workplace bias takes many forms, but the result is always the same: parts of the workforce are unfairly excluded from experiences and opportunities for which they are qualified.
The most common type of bias in the workplace is implicit, or unconscious. It operates at a level below more obvious, conscious prejudice, and affects our decisions in a much more subtle way.
Confronting this type of bias requires a careful approach, because most people are not aware of it. Recognizing that the bias exists is the key to reducing its influence.
Unconscious bias brings irrelevant factors into the decision-making process. Age, ethnicity, gender, weight, and even hair color can play a role in personal assessments of candidates and employees and influence the decision to hire, fire, and promote in the workplace. While these influences may be unintentional, it does not change the fact that they are fundamentally unfair. For one organization, using technology to mitigate bias lead to a 58% increase in new hire diversity—see how.
You can think of unconscious bias as the cognitive equivalent of muscle memory, coming into play when we are faced with gaps in our own personal experience. Due to the human brain’s tendency to create shortcuts, everyone has unconscious biases.
The human mind is fantastic at creating connections and grouping things together for easy access. When faced with unfamiliar or infrequent circumstances, it disproportionately pulls from widely applicable (and misinformed) associations, like stereotypes. Combined with its preference for what is familiar, we can make prejudiced decisions while still consciously believing that prejudice is wrong.
When a group of researchers investigated on-the-job performance among cashiers in a French grocery chain, they started by measuring each manager’s unconscious bias with the Implicit Association Test (a common test for this type of bias).
They found that when minority cashiers worked under managers with a high degree of unconscious bias, they underperformed: taking more time between customers, scanning items more slowly, and almost never working late. When those same cashiers worked with unbiased managers, they were actually 9% faster and more efficient than their coworkers.
There are hundreds of other examples of unconscious bias at work. Women and minorities are consistently given lower performance ratings for the same quality of work. They are underrepresented in management roles. Older workers are assumed to be technically challenged. The list goes on.
Here we’ll look at a five-step process for mitigating bias in the workplace.
The first step is your internal PR campaign.
As with any far-reaching initiative, it is important that everyone knows it is a priority. Set the expectation that you are making bias mitigation a priority with a company-wide announcement. This is also where you begin the feedback-gathering process. For most companies, an anonymous survey is a good starting place.
The first announcement does not need to be complicated: just outline the “why” (e.g., to build a more inclusive work culture), the “when” (e.g., in the coming weeks), and highlight that employee feedback will be used to drive the process. Its purpose is to spark conversations and motivate employees to complete your anonymous survey. The more feedback you gather, the more data you have to build out specific programs.
Survey questions you should consider include Likert Scale (Strongly Agree - Strongly Disagree) statement-response questions and open-ended questions that let employees elaborate on their thoughts. (This is not an inclusive list; use it as a jumping-off point for your own ideation):
These give you a good mix of answers to evaluate where your company currently stands.
Once you make the initial announcement, keep the conversation going. If your company uses Slack (or another chat service), create a group where interested employees can propose bias-mitigation strategies and discuss how to make the issue relevant to their coworkers. These “first movers” will be your key champions going forward.
This is where most efforts to curb bias go wrong.
Mandatory bias and diversity training almost never works. In fact, it can decrease the representation of underrepresented groups in management. In Frank Dobbin’s study of 829 midsize and large US firms, those that mandated diversity training for managers either saw no movement in the percentage of underrepresented groups in management, or experienced declines.
But in the same study, voluntary training showed the opposite effect: 9-13% increases in underrepresented groups in management across the board. What happened?
Most mandatory diversity and bias programs come with a subtle message: Complete this training, or else. Threats don’t create champions, they create silent rebels. They aggravate existing biases, and even create animosity towards the groups the training was designed to support.
Voluntary programs work because participants see themselves as “pro-diversity.” They create a virtuous cycle, because the way we think about ourselves feeds directly into the way we act. Those champions, in turn, are likely to be naturally influential and pull their more skeptical coworkers into the fold.
The next step is to educate your willing volunteers.
For those unfamiliar with unconscious bias, it can be a tough concept to fully appreciate. A good starting point is Harvard’s Project Implicit. This free test works via word-picture association to measure unconscious biases toward certain groups. Give their individual results some context with some of the data we’ve presented above, and examples from this article.
The goal for bias awareness is to make the decision-making process more mindful. If employees keep their implicit biases in mind when evaluating performance, making a hire, or nominating a team member for promotion, they are less likely to lean on mental shortcuts.
Another way to build bias awareness is through “perspective-taking.” Put simply, perspective-taking involves putting yourself in another person’s shoes and focusing on how his or her experiences in a given situation will be different from your own. A study of three different diversity training programs found perspective-taking to be the most promising in terms of long-term benefits.
It may be helpful to partner with a bias training provider in these early stages. If you choose to partner with an external training company, make sure to set actual, tangible goals to make it possible to measure the success of the program.
Certain business processes are particularly prone to bias. Others help remedy it. Focusing on procedures that reduce the influence of bias help address it at a structural level.
As with any initiative, setting measurable goals is important. While the ultimate goal is building an inclusive workplace that facilitates fairer processes and decisions, when starting out, your goals don’t need to be related to demographics or representation in management. Setting targets for bias understanding and awareness (as measured by follow-up surveys) is a much better starting point—See 5 ways to increase workplace diversity.
Remember that your organization is unique. Inspirational anecdotes from another firm’s success can only provide so much guidance. Setting and tracking measurable goals will tell you when to stay the course, and when to change direction.