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by geofft
3877 days ago
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I don't understand this argument, unless you are making an assumption that a company has infinite open positions. If I'm trying to staff a 10-person team, and I find 30 qualified candidates who are willing to take the job, there is zero sense in which I'm lowering standards to look at factors other than merit once I have already looked at merit. So if one-third of those candidates are from some minority demographic, and there's a company policy that encourages me to extend five offers to that one-third, I'm still keeping my standards right where they've always been. In fact, it is precisely because there are more than enough candidates with technical merit that we have other measures like "culture fit". |
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I find that hard to believe, at least for any realistic scenario.
Even if all of those candidates exceed the minimum level of merit required for the job, it's very likely that some will still have more or better skill/talent/experience than the others. There will still be an ordering based purely on merit.
Ignoring this ordering when choosing the 10 successful candidates would be a case of ignoring merit, which would indicate a lowering of standards.