Race matters in hiring. Employers hire based on race, age, and religion despite the laws that are meant to prohibit unfairness or discrimination. This Supreme Court debate from 2003 in retrospect, had little affect on the ways that race still matters today to many hiring managers. I read this and say, this is the longest marathon of issues in race relations that affect minorities:
Today, the national policy of nondiscrimination is firmly rooted in the law. In addition, it generally is agreed that equal opportunity has increased dramatically in America, including in employment. Blacks and other people of color now work in virtually every field, and opportunities are increasing at every level.
Yet significant work remains to be done
Charges alleging race discrimination in employment accounted for 35.5 percent of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s (EEOC) 2005 charge receipts, making race still the most-alleged basis of employment discrimination under Federal law. In addition, several private studies conducted in the early 2000s provide telling evidence that race discrimination in employment persists.
A 2003 study in Milwaukee found that whites with a criminal record received job callbacks at a rate more than three times that of blacks with the same criminal record, and even at a rate higher than blacks without a criminal record.
A 2003 study in California found that temporary agencies preferred white applicants three to one over African American applicants. And, a 2002 study in Boston and Chicago found that résumés of persons with names common among whites were 50 percent more likely to generate a request for an interview than equally impressive résumés of persons with names common among blacks.
Civil Rights Law and Hiring Practices. (2009). Supreme Court Debates, 12(7), 6.
They smile in your face
There are ways that employers can subtly discriminate in other ways, many times under a grin. Sometimes, a “Cheshire grin.”
First, let’s discuss the “Cheshire Cat Grin” that I have received in the past. It is the smile the receptionist offers upon your arrival for an interview. The smile is to put you at ease. The smile that says…”Welcome.”
It says two other things:
- The person hopes to smile enough to disappear, like the Cheshire Cat from Alice and Wonderland. It’s obvious he or she does not want to be at work.
- The same smile offered an employer (receptionist, HR manager, gopher) revealed you are different than the way you sound. I have seen this smile given when a woman named “Charlie” with a low “C” voice (she probably sings contralto). More times I have seen the “Cheshire Grin” given when an Asian-American, Latino American, or African-American has a name like, um, uh, “Mark.”
- Oh, you’re Mark! Wow! Okay!
I have a diverse set of clients in the past three years who came to me because their strategies were not working. Out of the changes we made to their resume and interview style, we used two simple strategies to apply for jobs and on his or her resume:
- Modify the name on the resume (ex. from “Latoya” to “Lynn,” “Miguel” to “Michael”)
- Remove the address and zip (area can determine culture or color)
- Remove social, political, or service organizations that traditionally are one race
- Any identifiable cultural associations with sports (once remove a client’s college tournament “Sweet 16” appearance)
Shocked? It’s better to get mad and become strategically shrewd.
I wouldn’t mention this if it did not make a difference in my client obtaining more interviews and being hired. Appalled?
Many people are uncomfortable talking about race, but it’s real. Race matters in hiring, no matter how polite, no matter how big the smile, and regardless whether you are “well-spoken.” It’s not as if an Asian-American cheated, or gamed the system. It is taking race out of the decision. That is all.
Perhaps fewer decision makers racially profile today than 1980. It is relevant on all levels of professional positions and ranges throughout retail sales positions. It is unavoidable.
Despite what anyone could gather from this post, standing out in the right way is not a bad thing. As scrutiny from Human Resource professionals applies towards age, experience, and education, don’t believe for a moment subtle details that indicate race wouldn’t matter. Many employers would instead hire the employed than the unemployed.
I wish all of us would have the “Cheshire Grin” power and appear/disappear at will. Grin and our race, gender, culture, or accent would sink so it wouldn’t matter.
But race matters, and there’s nothing you or I can do about it.
Feel free to tell me if I’m out of my mind, or that this is a fair assessment. You can also cry uncle or foul in the comment section.
About Mark Anthony Dyson
I am the "The Voice of Job Seekers!" I offer compassionate career and job search advice as I hack and re-imagine the job search process. You need to be "the prescription to an employer's job description." You must be solution-oriented and work in positions in companies where you are the remedy. Your job search must be a lifestyle, and your career must be in front of you constantly. You can no longer shed your aspirations at the change seasons. There are strengths you have that need constant use and development. Be sure you sign up to download my E-Book, "421 Modern Job Search Tips 2021!" You can find my career advice and work in media outlets such as Forbes, Inc., Fast Company, Harvard Business Review, Glassdoor, and many other outlets.