The diversity of the global workforce is rapidly changing, but are your hiring practices keeping pace?
Numerous studies have shown the value of a diverse workforce, yet only 57% of recruiters say their talent acquisition strategies are designed to attract diverse candidates. So what is holding back the other 43%? For many companies, the idea of developing hiring strategies specifically aimed at increasing diversity seems daunting, but it doesn't have to be.
So What is “Diversity” Anyway?
For many people, that term immediately brings to mind race or ethnicity, and surely those are important factors to consider, but diversity also comes in many other forms. Inherent Diversity focuses on factors over which job applicants have no control; things such as race, sex, and age. While Acquired Diversity focuses on factors such as educational background, job experience, personal values, specific skillsets and knowledge. Frequently diversity spans several categories and this intersectionality creates even more complicated layers of diversity which should be considered as well.
Diversity Drives Profitability
In a series on diversity that has spanned nearly half a decade, McKinsey has explored all the ways in which diversity leads to greater company success. So it goes without saying that companies shouldn’t aim to increase diversity just because it’s the right thing to do, but also because it means higher profitability. Companies whose leadership team diversity is in the top quartile are 25% more likely to have above-average profitability than those in the bottom quartile.
Tackling the Challenges
For better or worse, many companies avoid the conversation about diversity hiring because they fear it will lead to interpersonal conflict. But like most things, it’s all in how you approach it. For starters, as a business owner or manager it’s your responsibility to set the expectation of how you envision your company values and the goals which you strive to achieve.
Job seekers are becoming increasingly aware of company diversity and in a recent study, 67% of job seekers polled cited diversity as an important factor when considering companies and job offers.
So you may be wondering then, how can you attract more diverse candidates?
Five Tips to Diversify Your Candidate Pool
1. Be cognizant of the words you use in your job listings
2. Conduct a review of your benefits package
3. Expand your job posting reach
4. Conduct a thorough audit of your Company and your brand.
Are you reflecting a workplace that values diversity - this includes everything from your website to your advertising to your leadership team. Also keep in mind that numbers matter. The “Two in the Pool Effect” says that a female’s chances of being hired if she is the only woman in the candidate pool are effectively zero. But by having just two females in the final candidate pool, her chances of being hired are 79x greater. Those numbers are even more dramatic when talking about minority candidates - their odds are 194x greater.
5. Make a great first impression
Ensure that your Talent Acquisition teams reflect the diversity you seek in job applicants. The hiring team is most likely the first contact a potential candidate has with your company and first impressions matter.
Improving your company’s hiring diversity won’t happen overnight but it needs to start somewhere. It takes work and commitment and the companies that do it right and do it the best got there because the entire team worked together towards a common goal.