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When it comes to the future workforce, the power is in the untapped potential. In our last article, we dug through the traditional way of hiring based on experience and why that can leave Gen Zs hiding in their shells-- afraid to try if they arenât perfect at something. Thatâs why itâs so important that you encourage and empower the innovative, ambitious side of students so that you can evolve as a business and grow faster with young minds at your side. Today, weâre going to take you back to the career dinner and let you change up the menu one more time because we arenât finished just yet.Â
When we say you want to change the menu and give students a seat at the table, we donât just mean encouraging their potential and passion for fresh ideas, we also mean paying attention to whatâs driving your hiring decisions.Â
Operating on unconscious bias as an employer means that youâll end up with a much more homogenous workforce, where beliefs are only ever confirmed and never challenged-- this makes it harder to move forward and innovate.
Put differently, who are you inviting to this career dinner? People you already identify with and know? Is it because they confirm or validate your views and opinions? Is it because they look a certain way, or because theyâre from a certain place that youâre already familiar with and feel secure around? Itâs quite common that employers to make hiring decisions based on things like this. The phenomenon weâre talking about here is called unconscious bias, which causes us to âact in ways that reinforce stereotypes even when in our conscious mind we would deem that behavior counter to our value systemâ (Harvard Business School). Unconscious bias is similar to affinity bias, which describes how we are more likely to approve of someone or something if that person or thing has something in common with us (same gender, race, nationality, upbringing, or beliefs).Â
The problem with hiring someone, because they feel or look right, is that this wonât necessarily transfer to their work ethic or their cooperation with the team dynamic. It also means that youâll end up with a much more homogenous workforce, where beliefs are only ever confirmed and never challenged-- this makes it harder to move forward and innovate.Â
Hiring based on a CV alone often leads to hiring stereotypes.
At Minite, weâve taken conscious steps to eliminate unconscious hiring bias. Last month, we launched our unbiased avatars on our website, so that every student can choose a food with which they identify and set this as their profile photo. When students and employers see these foods and the characteristics theyâre tied to, thatâs all they see, and judgment or elimination doesnât go beyond the skills-- plain and simple. Weâre also working on ways to replace student names with a generic username, as to remove any possible assumptions clients may make about an individual based on their name (names are often culture-specific, and as weâve previously explored, unconscious bias is also tied to cultural affiliation). This way, our clients are immediately directed towards evaluating a High-Flyer based on their skills, and nothing else.Â
Of course, itâs impossible to eliminate any kind of bias, as we are subjective individuals, after all. But itâs important to note that there are pivotal moments in which unconscious bias is most present, and during which we can make efforts to prevent it from taking over: one of these moments being a first impression. When we meet someone for the first time, we tend to associate their presence with something similar weâve seen before-- something weâre already familiar with. This is a natural reaction, as weâre trying to remember a new, unfamiliar person by linking them to someone or something weâre already familiar with. The problem is that, in doing so, weâre not evaluating the individual independent of our preconceived ideas, and therefore, weâre linking them to stereotypes.Â
Potential, progress, and performance have everything to do with who you are and nothing to do with how you look, where youâre from, or what you believe in.
The same thing goes for the initial review of a potential candidate -- weâre quick to make snap judgments based on comfort and confirmation. Hiring based on a CV alone often leads to hiring stereotypes. Isnât it more valuable for an individual to demonstrate skills than just to list them? And isnât it more valuable to challenge the status quo rather than confirm it, especially when it comes to progress, growth, and unique value in business? At Minite, we donât have to think twice about that. We want to provide equal opportunities and fair evaluations of our potential hires, and, being a student freelancing platform, we want to make sure that same spirit is present and enforced in the hiring process of one of our High-Flyers for a client.Â
Itâs time to change up the career menu and hire heroes of talent, skill, and drive, regardless of their background. Letâs give students a seat at the table, and letâs set a new status quo-- potential, progress, and performance has everything to do with who you are and nothing to do with how you look, where youâre from, or what you believe in. Thatâs our new recipe. Are you ready to give it a taste, career world?Â
Are you ready to hire your next talented student and grow your business? Book a demo call here or post your job for free here.
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