If you were to take a survey of your current employees, would you find that you've hired people from all walks of life? Some companies aren't aware of bias in their recruitment and hiring of employees. Implicit bias is, by its very definition, unconscious. When companies are biased in their hiring, without being conscious of it, how can the challenge be resolved? Is there a way to reduce bias during the hiring process?
The best way to reduce bias during the hiring process is to first be aware of our biases. Some of the time the bias towards job applicants isn't explicitly obvious. In some cases, it is. Here are a few examples of bias, explicit or implicit, during the hiring process:
Once HR is aware of the potential for bias, there are steps to take to reduce the chances of it. Creating standardized processes in the recruiting, hiring, and background screening can help increase diversity and reduce bias. Talk about prejudices and offer diversity training to make hiring managers aware of other cultures or personality types to reduce implicit bias. Here are other tips to consider:
The Fair Credit Reporting Act reduces some of the potential of bias by allowing the applicant to dispute inaccurate or untrue data on its background reports. An employers cannot legally dismiss an applicant from the hiring pool, whose background check reveals information that isn't true, until the applicant is aware they are being screened and the information could be used against them during the hiring process.
Ban the Box and other Fair Chance regulations have been adopted across the country in some municipalities, cities, and states. These law prohibit employers from inquiring about an applicant's criminal history until much later in the hiring process. If an employee is being offered the job, pending a background check, and the background check reveals a criminal history, the employee is still protected under the EEOC. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) requests that employers use a 3-factor test when examining an applicant's criminal history:
Employers must also be aware of inconsistent decision making when considering an applicant with a criminal history. The EEOC could still consider hiring some applicants but not others as a Title VII discrimination unless the employer has a job-related background screening policy and criminal background decision matrix to back up their decisions.