Inclusive recruitment: putting people at the heart of your organisation

Yasmin Georgiou
William Joseph
Published in
5 min readJul 4, 2023

Inclusive Culture is Key: Inclusive recruitment isn’t a side project, but a core part of an organisation’s culture. This culture values diverse perspectives and experiences, and emphasises that focussing on people is essential to achieving organisational goals.

Unlearning and Relearning: Organisations need to challenge the dominant culture and biases that have historically shaped recruitment practices. This involves unlearning old norms, being honest about existing attitudes, and redefining what a good candidate experience looks like.

Practical Steps for Inclusive Hiring: To implement inclusive hiring, organisations should approach recruitment like a marketing campaign, provide clear and accessible information about roles, advertise in diverse channels, offer flexibility in job roles, and be transparent about salaries. Equally important is to build a shared understanding of the role and the company’s values among potential candidates.

Our Panel

We hosted a lunch and learn event themed on inclusive recruitment as a follow-up to the topic coming up a lot with clients and contacts. The event was a space to learn and share together, and we had a fantastic panel with a mix of senior leadership, practitioner, inclusion and recruitment experts and a candidate’s perspective.

Panel:

  • Elvira Morrison, Director of Fundraising and Communications at Maudsley Charity, where she has spearheaded inclusive recruitment across several roles
  • Tessa Cooper, Co-Founder of Collaborative Future and an inclusive recruitment expert who advises organisations on how to embed excellent practice
  • Rania Nur, Product Manager at William Joseph, who offered a candidate’s perspective
  • Chair — Yasmin Georgiou, Strategy Lead, William Joseph
L-R: Yasmin Georgiou, Elvira Morrison, Tessa Cooper and Rania Nur

Approach recruitment holistically and authentically as part of an inclusive culture

“We started thinking about inclusive recruitment but it’s actually about your whole culture — it forces you in a positive way to look at your colleagues’ journey in their life at your organisation.” Elvi Morrison

Right at the start of the session, the panel challenged all of us to consider how inclusive hiring processes are a part of an organisation’s culture and centring their people.

Elvi talked about how you can’t achieve your organisation’s goals without good people, emphasising the commercial importance of finding the right people and that recruitment should not be a side project.

“Inclusion is not just about saying: ’have we got representation from different demographics?’, but rather: ‘can people bring their unique perspectives?’ Tessa Cooper

Diverse teams bring a whole new set of perspectives and experiences to organisations. Inclusive recruitment should not be a box-ticking exercise, it should be a purposeful decision that an organisation makes to be more equitable.

Unlearning approaches and biases — as individuals and organisations

“There is a dominant culture within the professional world of what good looks like…everyone is trying to become a cardboard cutout of that person.” Tessa Cooper

The audience asked the panel how to unpick some of the age-old recruitment practices and create a more holistic, inclusive culture. Tessa talked through how there is a dominant culture within the professional world, which is so multi-layered that organisations are not challenging their own thinking, biases or practices. This results in them not reaching new or diverse audiences — and instead creating teams of people that look, act and think like them.

We talked about organisations needing to unpack their own attitudes and be honest about how they’ve allowed the dominant culture to narrow their own thinking.

“People are used to having to jump through hoops for job applications — inclusive recruitment is about turning this around” Rania Nur

Rania reflected on traditional hiring practices being designed to ‘catch people out’ and the power dynamics being constructed to feel like a test. The inclusive process that she was a part of enabled space for her to give her best and she advocates for creating more equitable processes where candidates and employers can collectively explore if this role is the right fit, if the rapport is there and what the opportunities in the role are.

Practical advice on starting your inclusive recruitment journey

Focus on:

  • What you’re looking for
  • What the role consists of
  • What your organisation can offer people
  • What the expectation is
  • Create shared understanding of all of the above using accessible language and information in job packs.

10 top inclusive hiring tips:

  1. Approach recruitment like a marketing campaign — don’t rely on your HR manager, but instead work collaboratively and consider the audience, key messages and channels early on. This also includes evaluating your marketing afterwards and how you filled the role.
  2. Rethink traditional JD structures — workshop your JDs with people who you’d like to attract
  3. Always show salary — candidates expect and need this and lack of transparency is a ‘red flag’
  4. Demonstrate any job flexibility — for example for part time roles — ‘up to x hours per week’
  5. Advertise in places where your ideal candidates are — make your roles more accessible beyond usual channels to enable the most amount of people to see your role and bring their experience to your organisation. Think about your target audience e.g diversity was key for Maudsley Charity and so they placed ads in The Voice and The Gleaner.
  6. Ask if candidates want to see interview questions — for some people seeing the questions is important and for others, it may incite more anxiety. Be mindful of this and give people the choice.
  7. Provide opportunities for candidates to learn about the role e.g. ‘Ask us anything’ webinar, which can include topics like what’s the worst day at work like etc
  8. Use your networks — communities introduce people to other communities and so use your networks to shape and share job opportunities
  9. Be clear about your values — share your values and find people who will expand and grow with you
  10. Rolling recruitment — consider accepting speculative applications from people who are inspired to join your organisation

Be the change

We all agreed that making things accessible creates a better experience for everyone, and so we need to collectively work to change traditional hiring practices to create more inclusive, diverse and high-performing teams.

At the end of the session, Elvi tasked the audience to ‘be the change’; to go back to their organisations and start conversations to evolve recruitment processes. After going through the journey at the Maudsley Charity, she now reflects that “it’s easy now” because this is the new norm — although getting to this point required time, energy and learning, they’re in a much stronger position and are excited to be building a diverse team.

We’d love to hear people’s feedback on the session and any practices or processes that you’re keen to change — get in touch!

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