Many organizations do a good job of diversity recruiting at the college and mid-management level, but often fall short when it comes to the senior management ranks. It is well-recognized that having women and people of color in the top spots will assist in your overall diversity sourcing efforts as well as in retention of diverse mid-managers and entry-level employees.
Dedication to attracting talented women and people of color who often are underrepresented at the senior management and board levels of many organizations has now become a priority.
Traditional sourcing methods used by internal recruiting departments, such as posting jobs and identifying individuals in similar positions may not yield the desired results when attempting to build an inclusive workforce. Thus, hiring organizations often turn to search firms, insisting on an inclusive candidate slate, but often are disappointed with the results.
Active participation is vital to the success of any search, but recruiting efforts with a diversity focus need special emphasis from the hiring organization. Whether dealing with external search firms or independent sourcers, to ensure the best outcome, the hiring organization must:
What, then, should hiring organizations and managers do?
Well, they should select sourcing professionals and search firms that have an extensive database which includes women and people of color, and that is knowledgeable about the use of online diversity research tools. The search firm also should be familiar with directories and periodicals that identify women and people of color, and it should have solid relationships with diversity-focused organizations.
It also is vitally important that the organization has a proven, solid, on-boarding program for all hires regardless of gender or race. The program will need to overcome the hidden skepticism and suspicion of acceptance in the culture that women and people of color may bring with them. It also should include a presentation about the community to which the candidate will relocate, particularly with people of color, with respect to demographics, housing, schools and churches.
The successful candidate’s decision to accept an offer will be driven primarily by the opportunity and how it plays in his or her career aspirations. However, acceptance of that person’s family into the community, neighborhoods, schools and churches also will be drivers.
Now, the candidate may more than likely have researched that information for him or herself prior to acceptance. But inclusion in the on-boarding program will send a message of caring about potential concerns of the new hire. Additionally, it will give him or her on-the-scene perspective rather than one from pure data.