|
|
|
|
|
by sintaxi
3257 days ago
|
|
Lets say it could be measured accurately. What outcome would show a company is adequately inclusive? 50/50 male/female within management and non-management roles? What if that is not the ratio of qualified applicants or applicants in general? That doesn't even factor in trans people or non-binary genders. The situation gets infinitely more complex when race is involved as race is difficult to determine especially when people have ancestors of mixed backgrounds as almost everyone does. Should race be measured by ancestry via DNA test or by some sort of skin tone scale? How granular should we be with categorizing blacks, asians, or whites, etc or are the categories kept very broad? If so, why? Is height and weight also a factor? How granular is granular enough and who decides this? What if someone self-identifies as a race or gender different than their appearance implies? Does someone decide how people are categorized or is it 100% embraced how someone chooses to identify themselves? Having one or two pie graphs seems incredibly dubious to me given the complex nature of this topic and major problems can arise from letting identity politics run wild. It seems like a much better idea to me to evaluate applicants/employees blindly as much as humanly possible and to have a zero-tolerance policy to do otherwise. |
|
But I think you're throwing the baby out with the bathwater here.
Let's take a concrete example: at several large tech. companies, female engineering grads were being paid less than males with equivalent qualifications and skills. Yes, the numbers were aggregated across hundreds (maybe thousands?) of hires and there were most definitely individual exceptions in both directions.
But the overall trend highlighted a problem, which boiled down to a gender difference (again, w/ the 'aggregate statistics' caveat) between negotiating styles when it came to salary. Correcting the approach taken by HR smoothed out the difference over the course of years.
How would that have been noticed, investigated, and addressed w/o having metrics in the first place?
Edited: "It seems like a much better idea to me to evaluate applicants/employees blindly as much as humanly possible and to have a zero-tolerance policy to do otherwise." ... and I agree entirely. The purpose of the metrics is to learn whether you're doing an adequate job of that, _not_ to enable you to treat candidates differently based on their identity.