Unconscious bias: Stereotypical hiring practices. | Gail Tolstoi-Miller | TEDxLincolnSquare

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  • čas přidán 3. 05. 2017
  • Once a Goth chick living in the East Village of New York City, now in the corporate world, Tolstoi-Miller shares her very personal story of bias and how recognizing her own unconscious bias taught her to say “so what”.
    Inspirational. Motivational. And 100%, totally real. CEO Gail Tolstoi-Miller is a Jersey girl turned award-winning career coach, staffing strategist and author. Whether she’s advising executives on their broken hiring processes or setting job candidates straight about their blind spots, Gail doesn’t pull any punches. With over 20 years industry experience and over 15,000 job placements, her insider perspective will shock and surprise you. Gail’s companies include Consultnetworx, which trains companies on hiring best practices and recruitment strategies; and Careernetworx, which provides coaching solutions to candidates looking for a Happy Career and Happy Life (tm). Gail’s first book, Networking Karma, won IndieReader’s 2016 Discover Award for best business book of 2016. Gail is an NYU graduate, with a BA in Sociology.
    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at ted.com/tedx

Komentáře • 219

  • @Essays4College
    @Essays4College Před 6 lety +107

    This is perfect example of why so many bad managers and horrible corporate jobs are out there.

  • @oyindamolaayo-ajiboye7168

    Asking yourself "So What" helps you return to the conscious and focus on what is important. We also need to understand individual differences and stop being biased especially while hiring. Thanks for this great advice.
    Really insightful!

  • @cartt9373
    @cartt9373 Před 6 lety +12

    Love this. Needed to hear it. I feel less anxious about looking for a different job, without feeling unconsciously discriminated against. That's my biggest fear whenever I go to a job interview that I'll be judged for the complexion of my skin, and everything else the list goes on. But I have to remind myself that I'm going into the job for the position, not for the preferences of the interviewer. I will not be afraid anymore.

  • @givealittlenow
    @givealittlenow Před 7 lety +17

    I've been using "so what" in all kinds of ways in my life since i had the privilege of watching you speak! Thank you Gail!

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 7 lety +2

      Wendy, thank you. We spend so much time on things that don't matter. "So what" helps us focus on what is important so we can live more meaningful lives. Wendy, your talk was amazing and it will help millions of people.

  • @khalidahmed-fr6kk
    @khalidahmed-fr6kk Před 3 lety +19

    This is one of the comprehensive and great speech on unconscious bias . This is destroying the lives of millions of people everywhere and every day.

  • @HugDealer
    @HugDealer Před 7 lety +21

    Fantastic talk Gail. Not only it is packed with useful content but it can really be helpful to remind yourself that just because you end up in a lot of NO piles, it does not necessarily mean you are a loser. Sometimes it is way easy to get beat down when you face rejection after rejection, for jobs you know for sure you would be very good at.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 7 lety

      Glad you liked the talk. Feel free to share the message. yes, it brings an awareness to the candidate that they didn't have before. The candidate can use unconscious bias to their benefit. Since hiring manager/recruiters tend to gravitate towards candidate with similar interests, likes, background, etc., I tell candidates to do a social media investigation on the interview team and subtly work the "commonalities" into the interview.

  • @naveenyeddula8133
    @naveenyeddula8133 Před měsícem

    Brilliant .... "So... What" what a step way and way to think .. Awesome thinking,....

  • @1989Husky
    @1989Husky Před 5 lety +3

    @Gail Tolstoi-Miller I truly appreciate your theory and the simplistic solution of “So What?” Years ago, I became an advocate for diverse panel interviews when selecting for a supervisory/leadership positions. I saw diverse panels as a way to help reduce the impact of unconscious biases. From your talk, I realized I didn’t go far enough. In addition to the interview panels, I should have done candidate resume reviews the same way.
    For those that believe you can’t reveal your unconscious biases, spend some time in deep reflection or better yet, work with a coach that doesn’t offer answers but pulls them from within you! Guess what, you’ll discover many unconscious biases.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 5 lety

      Thank you for your comments. Diverse panels is another great way to combat bias. There are many ways to combat at and when you combine methods, it helps a great deal. Also, when many people talk about diversity, they think it's about checking the boxes. It's way more than that. It's also diversity of thought. It's great that you have made a conscious decision to dive in self awareness. Kudos to you.

  • @Age_of_Apocalypse
    @Age_of_Apocalypse Před 6 lety +6

    Great video Mrs. Miller! Every recruiter that I have met should watch it and more importantly, listen! Six(6) seconds to browse a resume and after that, they send an email or make a phone call to ask you for an information that is right in front of them in the resume. Astonishing, and depressing, to see the range of reasons as to why a resume is rejected. Your background and abilities have less weight than the way they have decided to perceive you. Apparently, and with no surprise, it is much easier to reject a candidate than to determine that he (or she) is (very) good at solving problems, doing a particular job.

  • @timbobau
    @timbobau Před 3 lety +8

    Oh dear... I have just come to the realisation that I have been discounting good applicants, without good reason, my entire career.
    Thank you very much for the video. It provided me with a consistent way to eliminate my unconscious bias using the "So What?" critique.

  • @scotthandler3314
    @scotthandler3314 Před 7 lety +18

    Excellently stated, Gail. Keep it up. My personal favorite is when I kill it on the phone interview only to get to the in person interview, and then the 30 yr old interviewer gets a look at my middle aged face. Then, post-interview my resume goes on the NO pile.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 7 lety +4

      thank you. Yes, there is a great deal of ageism. Ageism was in my original script but I decided to take it out because I wanted to point out little things like an email address or political tweet that can cost someone the job.

  • @kristenpressner6795
    @kristenpressner6795 Před 7 lety +15

    'So.What'--exactly. Thanks for actionable advice to break down unconscious bias in hiring Gail

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 7 lety +2

      Thank you! Means a great deal coming from you, a fellow Unconscious Bias Tedx Speaker.

  • @WitchyLady21
    @WitchyLady21 Před rokem

    Love this. Thank you for sharing!

  • @noneyabidnes4726
    @noneyabidnes4726 Před 3 lety +33

    - "I rejected an applicant because they have a peanut allergy."
    - "So what?"
    - "This is a peanut factory."

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 3 lety +12

      I dont think someone with a peanut allergy would even apply to a peanut factory, that makes no sense. Logic doesn't fit. Some reasons for not hiring a candidate are valid but the Tedx talk is to bring awareness to the reasons that are not valid.

    • @razortheonethelight7303
      @razortheonethelight7303 Před 2 lety

      Gail Tolstoi-Miller the person could have been allying to a part of the factory were peanuts were not close in proximity such as IT.

    • @Sharrrowkyn
      @Sharrrowkyn Před 2 lety

      Jesus, I almost choked. :')

    • @mariaairaxz2582
      @mariaairaxz2582 Před 2 lety

      😂
      that's an exception

  • @beckyhalvorsen2126
    @beckyhalvorsen2126 Před 2 lety +8

    I love the "so what"! Does the reason for putting the candidate aside really matter? Makes you think twice. - Thank you for this post.

  • @cartoonhere2239
    @cartoonhere2239 Před 6 lety +5

    I have an interview for Capriotti's on Saturday. Have any tips? I'm almost 18 and need to save up money for college.

  • @shivangisaxena9241
    @shivangisaxena9241 Před 8 měsíci

    This is really great!

  • @ajithdesilva5454
    @ajithdesilva5454 Před 6 lety +5

    Well done Gail. Keep up the good work!

  • @SSchithFoo
    @SSchithFoo Před 6 lety +125

    Recruitment "experts" are extremely narrow minded. People who can BS their way through interview usually get the job rather than someone who is really good at the job.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 6 lety +9

      thanks for your perspective

    • @neeshespieces
      @neeshespieces Před 3 lety

      I think this is so true!

    • @tonymagrof5303
      @tonymagrof5303 Před 3 lety +2

      Yes just because you are quick on your feet doesnt mean your good for the job. The hiring process is badly broken.

    • @iainclimie4144
      @iainclimie4144 Před rokem

      Isn't that a reflection of inadequate interviewing too?

    • @mck5549
      @mck5549 Před rokem

      Exactly, how does a person with an HR degree become qualified to decide on economics, when they know nothing about economics. How do they say that they gave the job to a Phd, when they themselves dont have PhD's?

  • @timothyfoxsr.1197
    @timothyfoxsr.1197 Před 7 lety +21

    As I continue to search for opportunities and continue to take a lot of "no's," it's comforting to know that it isn't necessarily me or my fault.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 7 lety +2

      its not always what you think

    • @batfly
      @batfly Před 6 lety

      Satisfaction or self actualization is next to impossible working to enrich a large corporation. Cashing out your 401 K savings and rolling the dice on your dreams, you don't have any time for now because you're making someone else rich, is the riskiest and possibly most rewarding thing you could ever do.

    • @cmo_rocks
      @cmo_rocks Před 5 lety

      Any luck yet? Hopefully so. I'm living this now.

    • @booishoois309
      @booishoois309 Před 4 lety

      Yep, welcome to socialist mind set. No personal responsibility, it's always someone else's fault.

    • @bluesun2001
      @bluesun2001 Před 3 lety

      I have learned that it's often not your fault you were fired or not hired, it's a conflict within the system, management or within herself/himself the hiring person has.

  • @SmithCommaBenjamin
    @SmithCommaBenjamin Před rokem +1

    It's been my experience, that any company that disqualifies you for petty reasons is a company you don't want to be apart of.

  • @AdeleMcLay
    @AdeleMcLay Před 7 lety +3

    Great presentation, Gail. Huge congratulations on this TEDx. I'm thrilled for you. Adèle xx

  • @GailTolstoiMiller
    @GailTolstoiMiller Před 6 lety +8

    wow its my one year anniversary since this has been posted. I am so glad more companies are doing unconscious bias training.

    • @DrMelvin69
      @DrMelvin69 Před 5 lety

      Gail Tolstoi-Miller I’m entering an advertising competition and this month we have to help people in the work force understand unconscious bias. Do you have any ideas/experiments to help people understand this? Awesome ted talk btw.

    • @oldsoulbiz3526
      @oldsoulbiz3526 Před 5 lety

      I'm sorry, but you're a delusional woman. There's no such thing as "unconscious bias." Absolutely ridiculous.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 5 lety +1

      @@DrMelvin69 thank you

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 5 lety +1

      @@oldsoulbiz3526 right to your own opinion. Then focus on conscious bias if you think unconscious bias doesn't exist

    • @spaceydayz2
      @spaceydayz2 Před rokem

      Unconscious bias is a hypothetical idea. There is no scientific evidence of unconscious bias.

  • @TJosephExiles
    @TJosephExiles Před 3 měsíci

    She's right about everything, essentially. The fact that she has to make the speech at all - to an industry full of people whom you'd think wouldn't need to be told this, given how 'expert' they're supposed to be in the realm of interpersonal dynamics - is...appalling. It'd be analogous to having to tell a skydiver about this little-known physical force called 'gravity.' But someone's gotta make sure we remember our parachutes up there, I guess. Great presentation. Sincere and frankly, pretty brave to take on the flaws of her own peers with the aim of benefiting everyone involved. 👏

  • @alexlewis8468
    @alexlewis8468 Před 3 lety +7

    Thanks for the video. I have to admit, I struggle massively with the concept of Unconcious Bias, its use in the world and a lot of the content in this talk. Beyond my general reservations about the validity of the testing (as raised by those that developed it) and the outcomes of implementing UB training are underwhelming to say the least. I find it increasingly frustrating that people consider 'Not hiring someone because of the colour dress they were wearing' as a symptom of UB - thats just an example of dire recruitment skills and personal responsibility- if you know the reason, then its not unconcious. Also, there is no easy way to prove outcomes whether bias is positive or negative in the real world. For example - how many times has UB helped hire the best candidate?
    Despite my reservations, I will keep an eye on how the field of UB as it unfolds as it is an interesting notion.

  • @MyteeBumbleBee
    @MyteeBumbleBee Před rokem

    This was a most informative and home-hitting video.

  • @vikotto
    @vikotto Před 5 lety +4

    This can turn into some scary stuff down the road. Companies are trying to get into your heart and head and conclude what’s wrong with us. I don’t even know what makes me tick sometimes, you think I’m gonna hand that job over to a entity that sees me as a number? You crazy!

  • @rachelchalmers6476
    @rachelchalmers6476 Před 7 lety +6

    This is brilliant.

  • @mgstatus...2006
    @mgstatus...2006 Před rokem

    Very informative video luv it

  • @rickstockton6382
    @rickstockton6382 Před 6 lety +2

    Gail presents a good idea really, REALLY well.

  • @moee4000
    @moee4000 Před 2 lety +1

    She is such a great speaker,

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 2 lety

      Thank you. I was so nervous doing it but I said "so what" to my fear and pushed through.

  • @margo7638
    @margo7638 Před rokem

    Thanks for video. This is actual topic. I also have a problem with looking for the best candidates. I'm waste a loooong time. Colleagues, how you decide this problem? Which do you use a site or platforms?
    Tell me yours lifehack)

  • @gabbieannie8025
    @gabbieannie8025 Před 5 lety +10

    I experienced this now very very recently. I'd had my fair share of work and time as a trainee in a Non-gov organisation but still they didnt hire me. I heard that its because they find me too radical and they were threatened at my presence, clearly they "can't quite put their finger on me" I accepted it openly but felt really bad for the time and effort I gave them. It felt that they just use me as resources, but I'm so glad I got out before they can even corrupt me.

    • @selvamvelu758
      @selvamvelu758 Před 3 lety

      You can comment anything here.. But unless we hear their side of story, we can't say you are right..

    • @edwinamendelssohn5129
      @edwinamendelssohn5129 Před rokem

      Have you considered what they said?

  • @tanarri88
    @tanarri88 Před 2 lety +7

    So you can be a brilliant candidate, but your taste of fashion or hair condition is not meeting the HR expectations... this is a real loss for many companies, who are actually looking for an effective employee and not a fashion model.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 2 lety +1

      Happens all the time especially in certain industries such as cosmetic pharma sales reps.

  • @anahitbaghdasaryan5067
    @anahitbaghdasaryan5067 Před 2 měsíci

    When hiring/accepting people, unconscious biases can destroy their confidence, their motivation and self esteem. Talented individuals may hesitate to apply for positions they are qualified for, fearing rejection based on factors unrelated to their skills or qualifications. Even if they are hired, the lingering doubt stemming from perceived bias can hinder their performance and sense of belonging within the organization. Moreover, unconscious biases impede efforts to build diverse and inclusive teams. This may not only occur in workplaces but in teambuilding processes anywhere. People tend to judge others positively or negatively based on their own values or interests without even getting to know these people. I feel like the biggest challenge of avoiding unconscious biases is that even if we realize them, we may not want to change them as it may fulfill our values. If a person rejects someone with a tattoo then realizes that it was just an unconscious bias may not change their decision. A person may realize that this bias came from past experiences which they not want to undergo again. Overall, the speech shows that we have to be careful before making a decision about a person as our subconsciousness may make wrong shortcuts, leading us to wrong decisions.

  • @GailTolstoiMiller
    @GailTolstoiMiller Před 5 lety +1

    So excited. I just created an online unconscious bias course which is going live in about 5 weeks. Keep you updated.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 4 lety +1

      @@tylerkinnie7762 Hi Tyler, thanks so much. Glad you are sharing. My course will be released in the middle of July. I will keep you updated on this post once it goes live.

    • @clearview360x
      @clearview360x Před 2 lety

      how do i find out more about the course? thanks

  • @LIVdaBrand
    @LIVdaBrand Před rokem

    As an african-american male, I can tell you my mom used to tell me not to get dreads because I wouldn't get hired. Things have changed in that regard because of talks like these. Thanks!

  • @shailjamehra
    @shailjamehra Před 4 lety +4

    I have been rejected by the same company I worked for many years after I interviewed them again following a parenting gap. They think that I am lazy and outdated and won't be able to do the same work I have done for many years.

  • @rockybloniarz7557
    @rockybloniarz7557 Před 7 lety +5

    Great commentary on bias. Thanks for the input. Signed, recently retired (not)!

  • @jackiepacheco83
    @jackiepacheco83 Před 3 lety +1

    Companies need to take more time to review applicants and ensure they are hiring for the right reasons. This TED talk really dives into that!

  • @youtubetube6919
    @youtubetube6919 Před 2 lety +1

    Exactly. That's not only stopped there, even if you managed to go through the round of interviews, they still might not hiring you. They can say whatever the reason they don't hire you and most of the time, they always said that it's confidential and can't say much to you as a feedback, which is weird. From my experiences, that "confidential" might have this kind of unconscious bias, whether you're not from a prestigious university or you're not the same "type" of people like the interviewer, but they will give the reason like the skill is not what we're expected. But if you're from a prestigious university, even though you performed the same, they might still hire you. Welcome to unfair world.

  • @adrianrodriguez61
    @adrianrodriguez61 Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome speech.

  • @THEBEST1701
    @THEBEST1701 Před rokem

    Amazing!!!

  • @ambhpb
    @ambhpb Před 3 měsíci

    If you can say to yourself "so what", then its not unconscious bias. That's what makes unconscious bias so dangerous, you don't know you have it, so you can't recognize it and you can't ask yourself, "so what". It sounds nice to boil your fix down to 2 words, but the reality is, uncovering these biases takes an enormous amount of time and introspection. Taking implicit association tests for a wide variety of characteristics will help uncover these. My opinion, if you are already at the "so what" phase, you have already done 90% of the work by becoming conscious of your unconscious biases.

  • @chrisriley1839
    @chrisriley1839 Před 2 lety +3

    I wish she had mentioned the unconscious bias as it relates to age. Or maybe it more conscious bias!

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 2 lety

      It can be both. Based on my own recruiting experience, I feel age discrimination is one of the most accepted type of bias. Somehow its justified.

  • @jayali8392
    @jayali8392 Před rokem

    I was just denied for a position in which I gave a stellar interview for, citing that they chose candidates whose qualifications more closely matched the role. Come to find, that the selected candidate had none of the licensing their training program would be offering a prelicensing course for, meanwhile I had 2 of the 3 and direct domain expertise😕 I’m almost certain it’s because I didn’t match the desired ethnic background, even the role is not client facing

  • @sultanofswing7198
    @sultanofswing7198 Před 5 lety +8

    The test you took (IAT) May not actually measure what you suggest it does. It could also be measuring novelty bias or similarity bias and those were not controlled for in those tests. The test does not have a good repeatability either. Generally speaking within that field the test should be closer to 1 where tests validity above a .8 are seen as necessary to consider it a good measure. That test on the high range only scores .5. In fact one of the original co-authors has recently co-authored another meta-analysis which suggests there is very little correlation between what is measured on that test and behavioral bias. Some studies have even suggested that training for unconscious bias actually has a negative effect. As the implications for unconscious bias are that you aren’t consciously responsible for a behavior that came from you unconscious mind.
    My question is whether these seminars and speeches are a waste of time, effort and resources. If you haven’t controlled for the easier to identify and control for things associated with explicit bias. Ie the name on the resumes should not be seen by the recruitment officer. Then why go chasing ghosts?
    This is an extremely controversial subject and the quickness to accept a controversial scientific idea and create whole new positions and training whose impact appears to be little to none actually give those with reason a moment to pause. This all appears to be HR departments jumping on the trendy list and finding bias because not enough explicit bias was present to justify their budgets.
    Of course there is unconscious bias to what extend that manifests in behaviors hasn’t been fully proven to justify the expenditures of resources.
    Jury is still out on this new field and yet it is being pushed beyond where the science appears to be at this time. Disappointing that goals they want to achieve and I agree with are being pushed back because people would rather focus on this stuff than how to make resumes and interviews as free from explicit bias as possible.
    Just a thought only time and more science will tell. It does appear this wave of training is not called for yet but it is a way to appear progressive and trendy and maybe that was the point for this all along. I hope not.

    • @seanburton5700
      @seanburton5700 Před 5 lety

      Absolutely!! Keep up the good work, the IAT does not have any validity, but is being used across countries in workplaces as a political tool to fit a post modernist ideology.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 5 lety +1

      There is tons of unconscious and overt bias in the hiring practice. My speech did not allow to go into the nitty gritty of what we can do in the hiring process to help alleviate. I can tell you that people/companies do not hire or hire based on their own bias and there are many different types. It's impossible to eradicate it completely but companies can do way better. Training, self awareness, and process helps but not 💯

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 5 lety

      @@seanburton5700 iat should not be a starting point but it's not even close to being enough. It touches only the surface. I have been for a very long time and the reasons why companies don't hire people are sometimes unconscionable. Sometimes it's unconscious sometimes conscious. Corporate America has a very long way to go

  • @mrsruthiecastro6484
    @mrsruthiecastro6484 Před 7 lety +3

    unconscionable !!!!

  • @Finding_Finance
    @Finding_Finance Před 3 lety +4

    Perhaps you see an unconscious bias results In hiring someone but in actuality it is completely conscious.
    I know I evaluate people much differently than others. E.g. some people care more about skills, others more about motivation and ability to learn, others potential to move up and lead. I think many things are important.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 3 lety +1

      I agree. We must focus on what is important in hiring. But also be careful with biases that can creep into hiring decisions

  • @rabindranathtagore567
    @rabindranathtagore567 Před 2 lety +5

    Some of the stupidity in hiring practices is amazing. I'll never forget one instance when I applied to a job I found on Indeed. The employer had my resume showing 40 years of six figure sales experience. When the employer called the interviewers opening question to me was, "now what makes you think you would be successful in sales." I said have you read my resume and then hung up.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 2 lety

      thanks for sharing. Not all recruiters now how to recruit unfortantely.

  • @alinecardoso9668
    @alinecardoso9668 Před 3 lety

    It was told me that I should be working while I was looking for a job lol, because otherwise I would have a problem finding a new job, but at least for me it doesn't make any sense, if I am jobless how could I be working at the same time?

  • @number4cat1
    @number4cat1 Před 3 lety

    While I swing this watch in front of your eyes, relax, concentrate on my voice, and repeat after me: "I only THINK I know what I'm thinking. I only THINK I know what I think I'm thinking. I only THINK I know what I think I know I'm thinking ...". OK, now we're ready to talk about what you were REALLY thinking.

  • @lfeducator2151
    @lfeducator2151 Před 5 lety +3

    Do you mind if I use this in my training presentation?

  • @kaijobomb67
    @kaijobomb67 Před 6 lety +4

    goes completely against the meritocracy makes me to research this after i become a psychologist.

  • @sae4842
    @sae4842 Před 3 lety +1

    This was good. I get hundreds of resumes and i am wondering what type of unconscious bias I have. I tell my resume readers to spend less than 30s. I also tell them if it is longer than 2 pages, it goes to No. I would prefer 1 page since to be honest nearly everyone I end up hiring has a very well written one page resume. Is this wrong? majority of resumes are longer than 3. I feel this is a bias since I feel they did not care enough to make it into 1 page to not waste my time. What about coming to the interview in gym clothes? Now with the pandemic, one candidate had a very messy room... We work in an office but we don't see clients, should people show professionalism during the interview? Selecting the right candidate is about making judgement call so i sometimes have trouble making the distinction between am i being bias or am i making the right judgement call. It is subtle but as a manager i dont want to take the risk on a person who i only met for 2h and who i will be working with for years to come. We all have biases.

    • @rohans7194
      @rohans7194 Před 2 lety +1

      What about judging a candidate on the basis of accent for a technical role? What if the candidate is smart but introvert and don't like interacting too much with other employees except for work?

    • @sae4842
      @sae4842 Před 2 lety +1

      @@rohans7194 having an accent should not be a criteria for hiring. I have hired people with accents, I myself have a heavy one. Recently hired someone with a speech impediment, during the interview he made sure I understood him. He is performing great. This is why you need to make sure your questions test for skills you need. On how well people fit in the team, I don't ask questions about their work friendships but I look for whether they value teamwork, I ask about conflicts, and on feedback they have received. My team has more introverts than extroverts. Because I look for teamwork, it creates an environment for the introverts to ask questions but I always need to encourage them to speak up.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 2 lety

      Thanks for sharing. The amount of pages shouldnt matter. Can they do the job? Imagine putting someone in the no pile for a 3 page resume and they end up going to your competitor taking your clients away from you? Some of the best candidates that I hired did not have a great resume. I realize not everyone is good at writing one. Ironically, I have recruited recruiters and many cant write a resume well. It's great that you are using this talk to reflect. We all have biases and its impossible to eradicate it completely. Anyone tells you that you can is lying. But taking a pause and evaluating our own decisions helps us focus on what truly matters

    • @mck5549
      @mck5549 Před rokem

      So which scientific framework did you use that guided you that anything longer than 2 pages is a no? And the 30s as well?

    • @sae4842
      @sae4842 Před rokem

      @@mck5549 being concise and precise is important, I apply the KISS principle in many aspects of work (I hire for software development). You need to be able to sort the information, break down the problem in simpler pieces and present the right amount of information. So if you researched how to write a resume (all guides tells you to keep it at max 2 pages and target to the posting), and decided to ignore the guidelines, it tells me exactly that: you cannot read resume guides, did not targeted your resume, don't know what I am looking for (cannot sort the info in my posting). Resume is not the most important part, according to surveys, 80% people embellish their resume (even lie), interview is the most important part.

  • @ralphacda8886
    @ralphacda8886 Před 4 lety +3

    The only way to eliminate unconscious bias in the field of recruitment and selection is through AI. Take away the human aspect and let strictly predefined measures decide based on pure merit...

    • @micranley9880
      @micranley9880 Před 3 lety

      If you want to hire robots, that might work, but you cannot eliminate completely the human element if you're trying to hire a fitting human... it also depends on the job requirements and relationships...

  • @MrSivram28
    @MrSivram28 Před 2 lety

    It's not unconscious bias, it's conscious bias. They know what they're doing.

  • @Koop784
    @Koop784 Před 3 lety +3

    Soooo... Basically it's a lottery. Change your name to John Smith if you're a guy and Jane Doe if you're a woman, make your resume as bland as possible, and offer the most labor for the least amount of money to increase your odds.

  • @chriscunningham8807
    @chriscunningham8807 Před 4 lety +1

    True that recognising bias feels exhausting and accepting our unconscious bias ismuseful. Safety before innovation or change creates stagnation and mistakes. So what? Avoids false assumptions.

  • @jeremysnead9233
    @jeremysnead9233 Před 2 lety +3

    This is BS hiring has more to do with social connections and commincation skills.

  • @schwa8805
    @schwa8805 Před 6 lety +28

    All managers must pass a psychological test before they start their jobs.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 5 lety

      There are plenty of tests on the market that companies can utilize

    • @mrs.schmenkman2858
      @mrs.schmenkman2858 Před 3 lety +6

      ...and who gets to write the test and how do you know it wont be biased

  • @jigyanshushrivastava6153
    @jigyanshushrivastava6153 Před 4 lety +4

    Wow...

  • @Tall-Cool-Drink
    @Tall-Cool-Drink Před 2 lety +1

    If I have "Unconscious Bias" that I can't control, I won't worry about it.
    Besides, it doesn't really matter what you're thinking. What matter most to other people is how you behave.
    Your actions matter. What you think privately in your mind doesn't matter.

  • @Maxmaxmax63
    @Maxmaxmax63 Před 6 lety +7

    I think a great solution would be to have everybody wear bag plastic bags over their entire body and face while having a voice transcriber distorting their voice to make everyone sound the same. Great idea Gail!

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 6 lety +1

      Max, don't think I haven't thought about that. Great minds think alike.

  • @peterdentice5725
    @peterdentice5725 Před 3 lety +1

    2:34
    I think she's unconsciously, conscious.

  • @dirtygrease
    @dirtygrease Před 5 lety +14

    Perhaps you can elaborate more, but I'm under the impression that "unconscious" bias would be something that cannot be measured (it's not accessible to the conscious mind). So how do we measure the baseline "unconscious" bias, determine its impact (if at all) on the unconscious process and then furthermore determine the effectiveness of the training afterwards? I don't believe any empirical measurement systems are in place. What you are describing seems to be more along the lines of systemic bias: TRUE "unconscious" bias is, for example, sight. Light enters the cornea and the information is processed based upon your brains abilities to form an image, you have no say in the matter.

    • @Cognitoman
      @Cognitoman Před 5 lety

      Adam Larnach exactly lol...I was gonna say the same thing.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 5 lety

      Thanks for your comments. There is no way to completely eradicate unconscious bias because of all the information we process and our judgements, etc. However, there are things you can do in the recruiting process that will help such as removing names, college etc from the resume when sent to hiring managers. That's just one thing. It's very difficult to break our prejudice and viewpoints but when you are more self aware and do ask your self how this matters such as the white pumps, it helps.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 5 lety

      Also, once the hiring process is changed and improved, you can look at your hiring data to see the changes

    • @Cognitoman
      @Cognitoman Před 5 lety +1

      @@GailTolstoiMiller I think its good to be bias in the business world. If your giving someone a loan to buy a house for example. If they have a low credit score saying "so what if they have bad credit" and give them a loan anyways that could be big problems.

    • @Cognitoman
      @Cognitoman Před 5 lety

      but I think your just saying in general to ask the question "so what" correct ?

  • @thelastbrobo7826
    @thelastbrobo7826 Před rokem

    Age, race, or gender have never been factors in hiring at our company.
    Attitude, proven work ethic, goals and fit are the only things that matter.

  • @Cliffhouse97
    @Cliffhouse97 Před 3 lety

    The IAT does not meet commonly accepted standards of reliability and validity for a psychometric test. The creators know this, but apparently have no compunction to disclose it to the general public. It's become so commonly accepted that to question it now results in unfounded accusations of racism to shut people up. It's reprehensible.

  • @toomanybears_
    @toomanybears_ Před 5 lety +4

    If you are trying to rationalize NOT using your gut instinct in your decision making process, you’re not only going against human nature, you’re asking for trouble.

  • @georgejetson9801
    @georgejetson9801 Před 5 lety +9

    Great talk. Funny they are only spending 6 seconds on a resume but countless amount of time and though on nonsense like white shoes, accent, etc.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 5 lety +1

      Yep. Disheartening. Not focusing non what happens

    • @jonarauzo
      @jonarauzo Před 2 lety

      You left out gender and race. When it comes to hiring practices there apparently is no such thing as equal opportunity employment. Sad.

  • @prezbige
    @prezbige Před 3 lety

    Truth. The human element needs to be removed from the hiring process.

  • @DariusU69
    @DariusU69 Před 3 lety +2

    “This wasn’t a conscious decision but a conscious one” what?

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 3 lety +4

      Second part I stated unconscious but I agree it should have been clearer. It was a tongue twister. Thanks for watching

  • @johnpatrickoldfield534

    So says the speaker.

  • @melanynieto446
    @melanynieto446 Před 3 lety

    Chang is Costa Rican, btw.

  • @jderr557
    @jderr557 Před rokem

    Watching this video at least taught me what a micro-aggression is: it's Gail Tolstoi-Miller constantly pushing the hair out of her eye five times a minute, every minute. For God's sake lady, use a paper clip, rubber band, clamp, barrette, glue, scissors, whatever; but stop fiddling with your hair. Good grief.

  • @TheSinisterkelly
    @TheSinisterkelly Před 4 lety +5

    So prejudice?

  • @prohabetamu
    @prohabetamu Před 3 lety

    and then they say we do not discriminate based on you background

  •  Před 2 lety +1

    are we sure these are stereotypes?

  • @discerningacumen
    @discerningacumen Před 3 lety +1

    I have has to graduate the best schools and made portfolios in order to overcome prejudices. Not for making them profitable. What a waste of time and efforts! It is why I trust in the GOd Jesus and not in the ways of men.

  • @MrLogicAndReason
    @MrLogicAndReason Před 3 lety +4

    So lets have automated robots do all the hiring. Seems like that's the best solution.

    • @emalouc
      @emalouc Před 3 lety

      Have a look into how Amazon’s recruiting through machine learning went in 2018, huge fail! Machine learning will replicate unconscious bias

    • @MrLogicAndReason
      @MrLogicAndReason Před 3 lety

      @@emalouc were the machines given info on the applicants’ race/gender/etc in those studies?

    • @MAli-os2yj
      @MAli-os2yj Před 2 lety

      The did this. The system was only fed the candidate’s essentials like education and work experience. The algorithm heavily favored men

  • @Idontwanttoask
    @Idontwanttoask Před 4 lety +1

    I am the top dog.

  • @kenwiley8453
    @kenwiley8453 Před rokem

    I Knew a Girl Who Got a Job Offer No Resume and No Interview Literally only in 2 Days wtf

  • @ravikumargovindaraj7426

    Over a million resumes.. let's consider she took atleast 2 minutes to scan the resumes and worked daily for 8 hours without break or leave .. it would've taken 11 years to finish just that one million.. we aside the "more over".. if she took less than 2 minutes to scan... Then she should listen to what she is saying herself... She may be a victim of unconscious bias... I also wonder if 2 minutes is sufficient enough to "properly review a resume"..

  • @petero5313
    @petero5313 Před 3 lety +5

    totally disagree )) "so what" essentially means "it does not matter", but long commute does, one drunk picture does not, but three or four does. Polka dot does not, but pink tutu does. My experience is you have to trust you gut feeling. Btw, famous book Blink is written on exact same subject.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 3 lety +2

      Long commute doesn't matter depending on the person. The point is its not for recruiters to decide what they think is a long commute. One person can think a 15 minute commute is long and another might think 1 hour 15 minutes long. Where I live an hour commute each way not unreasonable

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 3 lety +1

      Whats wrong with a pink tutu?

    • @petero5313
      @petero5313 Před 3 lety +1

      Gail Tolstoi-Miller wear one and you will find out

    • @petero5313
      @petero5313 Před 3 lety +2

      Gail Tolstoi-Miller an hour commute is not terrible (I still would recommend working from home at least couple days a week), but two hours will make you much less productive. Frankly if you are convinced that after two hours commute in the morning you still can be productive, you are delusional.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 3 lety +2

      @@petero5313 this is your opinion. Its your recommendation. Its not up to you to suggest for me to work from home when I enjoy my alone time blasting the music for the hour and half commute. I dont want to work from home. So why are you imposing your beliefs on me cause you prefer that? What makes your perception the rules I live by? This is what recruiters and employers are doing everyday, telling candidates you should want to work from home, you should want a 30 minute commute. Not right

  • @lambomigue93
    @lambomigue93 Před 3 lety

    Alot of recruiters are lazy af to do any type of investigation.

  • @raindaniels5394
    @raindaniels5394 Před 3 lety +3

    This is a really problematic video, some of the examples shared are actually explicit, NOT implicit, for someone to say "they are lazy" from images seen on Facebook, is EXPLICIT (Conscious). Implicit is not knowing the belief they have. Explicit is knowing the belief. The person with the belief just doesn't call it that, they can't admit it is bias. Implicit bias exists, but calling explicit bias, implicit, is confusing the issue for people.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 3 lety

      Yes it can be confusing and the difference between implicit and explicit can be gray. My example was to highlight the inner voice of perception of a dad being lazy as stay at home dad. Someone might not admit that they feel that way but its what holding this recruiter back from moving this candidate to the next step cause unconsciously they are thinking. So when I expressed the lazy part in my tedx it was the unconscious speaking

  • @user-microburst
    @user-microburst Před 2 lety +1

    Unconscious bias is natural, unavoidable and ultimately irrelevant

  • @billybojangles5135
    @billybojangles5135 Před 5 lety +6

    Look into what jordan Peterson says about unconscious bias.. Then see if you think its a good idea to roll this out to all the work force. Force everyone to have physiological training, so they fully 100% agree with whatever the company does and all its views. And change what makes people who they are, their political opinions, their life experiences. You must conform. Pure Orwell right here.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 5 lety +2

      Right now companies and corporate America is based on safety, conformity and consensus. That's why certain bad behavior is perpetuatued: only hiring ivy, age discrimination, political views, etc. That's why I am not a big proponent of companies going on social media to check out the candidate because so much bias kicks in, weight, looks, politics, religion, etc.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 5 lety +6

      James, there are many different types of of unconscious bias but one of the most common one is hiring people like ourselves. That perpetuates an environment that lacks diversity in thought, etc. No one is saying an employee should change who they are but someone's politics, religion, gender, race, etc should have no influence in the hiring process

    • @bademoxy
      @bademoxy Před 5 lety +1

      @@GailTolstoiMiller -I lost count of all the industrial sites i visited to apply for work where not only the workforce was completely non WASP, they were ALL from ONE foreign nation or foreign culture while not ONE of them were born here in Canada.
      funny how THEY don't get this "diversity" lecture.

  • @laughingsmith119
    @laughingsmith119 Před 3 lety +1

    She burns her popcorn

  • @jonarauzo
    @jonarauzo Před 2 lety

    Most of the time there will be "gender bias" when the employer decides whether or not they should hire you. There is no such thing as equal opportunity employment. Sad.

  • @littlet-rex8839
    @littlet-rex8839 Před 2 lety

    It's bad when the internet has to become church, I've been learning how to treat people without bias all my life ,,,, in church and in my own Bible study

  • @sofiaa885
    @sofiaa885 Před 2 lety +1

    Don’t care I have my own company and god..

  • @thenny10
    @thenny10 Před 2 lety

    There is ALWAYS a deciding factor. If two candidates have the same resume, the deciding factor may be the white pumps. If someone shares the same belief as you, that is the factor that gives them the advantage. We should stop trying disrupt human nature. Apparently there was another candidate just as qualified who didn’t wear white pumps after Labor Day. They got the job, what’s the problem?

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 2 lety

      White pumps should not be a factor in the hiring process. It's a big so what. The person they ended up hiring was not as strong. The best candidate doesnt always win due to our own biases.

    • @thenny10
      @thenny10 Před 2 lety

      @@GailTolstoiMiller all things being equal, it might just come down to “white pumps.” There is always something that decides and if everything else is equal you might decide off of someone who seems to share the same value system as you.

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 2 lety +1

      @@thenny10 that's affinity bias. To prevent groupthink and lack of diversity of thought sometimes it's good to hire someone that isn't the same as ourselves

  • @SURAJ-ux9xd
    @SURAJ-ux9xd Před 3 měsíci

    So what

  • @monkey43950
    @monkey43950 Před 2 lety

    White Pumps! Many times the interviewee is too good for the interviewer. People don't allow strangers to measure your value.

  • @kubex2383
    @kubex2383 Před 3 lety +4

    Do you have any evidence of the unconscious bias in the workplace? Please cite studies or factual based information otherwise this is just another opinion.

    • @max_rove
      @max_rove Před 2 lety

      Do you have any evidence against it? If so, please share studies thanks.

  • @thereturnofluis
    @thereturnofluis Před 3 lety +4

    Not one piece of evidence given in this talk. Quote reputable studies before saying unconscious bias is in schools, judiciary etc.

  • @guiller2371
    @guiller2371 Před 2 lety

    With all my political, religious and racial justice posts I had written; my career is way gone.
    I am not surprised.

  • @thelordakira
    @thelordakira Před 4 měsíci

    so recruiters are unprofessional and incompetent, got it.

  • @DariusU69
    @DariusU69 Před 3 lety +1

    I don’t agree with your political beliefs isn’t unconscious yikes this is painful

    • @GailTolstoiMiller
      @GailTolstoiMiller Před 3 lety

      It is if you are recruiter looking on social media and unconsciously not hire someone because they go against your political beliefs. Its in that context