by beweinreich on 4/22/13, 2:45 PM with 89 comments
by Anechoic on 4/22/13, 3:03 PM
If you want to open opportunities for women, you post the job notice in places where women will see it. That will get you qualified candidates, and if you find a women who is the best person for the job, you hire her.
edit: spelling
by columbo on 4/22/13, 3:13 PM
If you want to increase diversity then, well, don't just say 'I need women!', rather go to where the diversity is.
There are a ton of groups, meetups, community boards that would love to know you are 'hiring' not that you are 'hiring <insert minority>'. For example: http://www.meetup.com/Women-Who-Code-SF/
by tptacek on 4/22/13, 3:17 PM
What you can do is gender-specific lead generation. Create a role that's not gender specific, then market the role (news flash: tech hiring is marketing) using women as a target market.
This process doesn't guarantee you women for your roles. At your scale (and ours) there's nothing you can do about this. You're going to have more men than women. When you hit the scale of, apparently, Etsy, you can start to see demographic shifts in your company that correspond to how you market your openings.
by antonID on 4/22/13, 2:58 PM
If you are worried about a gender gap, you should be looking at why fewer females apply. Once you remedy this, you will be able to consider an equal amount of applicants, and you should then choose them based on their experience instead of their gender. The title of this article makes it out as if people are trying to stop you from hiring women, when in fact, you are instead trying to justify discrimination.
by mooism2 on 4/22/13, 2:52 PM
Disqualifying all male candidates due to their gender is discriminatory, just as disqualifying all female candidates due to their gender is discriminatory.
by btilly on 4/22/13, 3:15 PM
Also I find it interesting that you were considering a woman for job as a UI designer. Why not another engineer?
Here is a potentially better way to do it. Is your female co-worker comfortable presenting in public? If so, have her give a technical talk with cool demos and say you're hiring. That's not a bad way to find potential employees. And if there are women available, seeing a female face of the company will make them more interested.
But if she comes back with a smart guy, hire him. Because you're looking for a good employee first, and not a woman first.
by voidlogic on 4/22/13, 3:08 PM
Put another way, rather than trying to explicitly seek awesome female employees, just make sure the awesome female candidates don't slip through. I think execs often mistakenly think they can fix cultural issues by fiat, when what is really needed is dedication and time.
I think what constitutes imbalance also needs to be defined. If 10% of qualified engineering candidates are female does having 10% of your engineering staff be female constitute balance? I think the case could be made it does; however, in relation the birth ratio of our species is it certainly imbalance.
by jerrya on 4/22/13, 3:15 PM
Advertise your position for a designer.
Make sure that the ad is seen in plenty of places where women designers may look. Do as much outreach to women as you want to. Speak to women tech meetups. Pass your job position along to professors likely to know qualified students and let them know the position is open to everyone, but you'd like to hire more women in general and are having problems reaching out to women. Use facebook, linked in, pinterest, to reach out to women developers.
Ask your #1 employee if she is interested in speaking to schools, meetups, conferences. Sponsor her speaking.
Interview qualified candidates.
Then hire a qualified candidate apt to do well at your position.
Also, let it be known you are always interested in good candidates, regardless of their specific expertise. Then when you find good candidates, make a position for them. This works well with your outreach and internship program.
(Other activities: sponsor outreach to high school girls, sponsor women in tech conferences, sponsor outreach to all high school students, create internships (and advertise those internships all across campus))
by oellegaard on 4/22/13, 2:57 PM
If I was a woman, I'd rather apply for someone looking for a developer, than someone looking for a woman - because then I knew I was hired because of my skills and personality - not my gender.
In legal terms, this is pretty much what you can do. You can hire a "person" not a person of a specific gender.
by Peroni on 4/22/13, 2:58 PM
I appreciate the intention but I don't think an 'honest' blog post is going to quell the controversy his tactic will undoubtedly drum up.
by nsxwolf on 4/22/13, 3:09 PM
by pessimizer on 4/22/13, 3:33 PM
That is the only way to build a culture (industry-wide) where there is a diverse group of people making hiring decisions. Once that happens, diverse bigotries will tend to cancel each other out, and the lack of a visible glass ceiling in the profession will encourage more people to try to join it from discriminated against groups.
Marginal discrimination by feel and intuition is mostly voodoo anyway. Thinking Person X is the best person for the job because he worked on a project at Company Y that you thought was interesting isn't necessarily picking the best person for the job (unless the project is directly applicable to what you're hiring them for), but it is necessarily compounding any prejudicial hiring practices from Company Y that may or may not exist there. In addition, at the margins is when people are chosen because they went to the same school as you, or they share your hobbies.
Have a qualification line, and above that line, pick the most historically disadvantaged. If you're still not getting any diversity, examine your qualification line (have I only considered people who went to private universities?) or market your interest, as this blog does well:)
by kevinthew on 4/22/13, 2:57 PM
by Jun8 on 4/22/13, 3:05 PM
The more important question is: (ii) Why is it hard to get a female interface designer (I have no clue but am assuming it is so) and what can you do to solve this problem? Trying to hire female programmers/designers is good but is an indirect method. Why don't you take your cool gear to your local middle schools, high schools, etc. and meet with future female programmers, to motivate them into this field.
by brudgers on 4/22/13, 3:24 PM
The problem the NFL model solves is the networking problem. The process of interviewing is recognized as valuable because it expands the industry's knowledge of the talent pool and provides a basic opportunity for less well connected candidates to present their credentials.
This means that even if a candidate doesn't get this job, they are on the radar screen for other jobs. Hiring decisions are still based on merit while the known talent pool diversifies over the long run.
by sodomizer on 4/22/13, 4:04 PM
However, you're also going to be judged by the statistics, which is to say, if you don't discriminate, you're going to be seen as discriminatory.
Someone write Congress and have them fix this please :)
As far as solutions, recognize that there's a reason most businesses like to hire people they know. They already know the people are capable and will fit in with the team, rather than "rolling the dice" with an unknown who might be perfectly competent but impossible to work with.
What that means is that you have a networking problem. You need to meet enough people so that if you decide to hire someone for a position, you immediately know some candidates. This means that some of them will be women.
I recommend going to the professors, campus organizations, or other authority figures that people already trust. This enables you to meet people without the somewhat creepy idea of showing up and trying to "recruit women" with some weird geek stunt.
Even better, consider your existing network: your employees. Have a dinner or drinks session where you encourage every employee to bring a friend "who might someday want to come on board."
I can't help you with the inherent paradox of being discriminatory in order to avoid being seen as discriminatory. But with more people on your mental rolodex, you'll have a better choice of finding someone who's a fit, and more of those will be women and other protected groups.
by mikestew on 4/22/13, 5:11 PM
Looping back to the topic of hiring women, it was good that he sought the feedback of his wife and his employee. Despite his noble goals, it sure struck me as creepy. "Do you have a vagina? Come work for us!" I read the article, but maybe I missed the part where he asked himself how the workforce got out of balance to begin with. I'm going to guess (given the attitude that he conveys) that he didn't set out to create a boy's club of brogrammers. Advertising in the wrong places? Maybe something in the interview process was more discriminatory than he thought? Something in the company that subtly doesn't appeal to women? An industry predominantly populated by those with penises? Look to identify problems like that, rather than running around where the girls hang out and blatantly recruit for chicks.
by hvs on 4/22/13, 3:11 PM
by pdeuchler on 4/22/13, 3:24 PM
I see your problem, and agree with your viewpoint that this PC culture we've developed might have gone a little overboard, however I don't think this is a case of that. You need to focus less on the gender, and what the gender provides.
"WANTED: Graphical Designer, has work consistent with a feminine point of view and can provide alternative perspective to a predominantly male industry"
IANAL, but I feel like that gives you enough legal ass-covering to say any male didn't qualify. Could probably be worded better though.
e: formatting
by fitzpasd on 4/22/13, 3:17 PM
Then you hope the best candidate is a women.
by darkchasma on 4/22/13, 3:12 PM
by evan_ on 4/22/13, 3:42 PM
The absolute best outcome here is that someone breaks his helicopter and he goes home. It's probably more likely that someone calls campus security or the cops and he spends the night in jail.
This is the stupidest, most socially-myopic plan I've seen on Hacker News since... well, since last night's "Very Short Response Expected" post.
edit- looks like this post got flagged off the front page, which is not surprising, but while I'm disappointed that fewer people will see how stupid you are at least it might save you from an EEOC discrimination charge.
by moron4hire on 4/22/13, 3:17 PM
After reading your article, I realized it is exactly the same way we try to hire people. We go out on job websites, fill out the job profiles, crawl through resumes and try to interview the perfect candidate. Dice.com, Monster.com, LinkedIn.com, they're the same exact thing as Match.com, eHarmony.com, and OkCupid.com.
And shock and horror, it doesn't fucking work in either case. I've had the same exact experience in hiring.
There were three things I learned through this process, in both spheres: 1) One got just as good of results from random selection as from HR-based, profile-based, direct-effort candidate searches. Actually, the random selection was better because it didn't take anywhere near as much effort. 2) Boiling people down into numbers and rankings and trying to figure out which one was "better" than the others made me physically ill. 3) The only way to find "the one" was to know them already. I quit trying, I expanded my circle of friends, I completely and successfully changed from an introvert to an extrovert, and eventually the stars aligned.
Now, that sounds like a system you can't count on, "stars aligning". But really, I think it is a system you can count on more often than anything else. For one thing, you know the "stars" will eventually "align". "Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity" -- Seneca. Opportunities are presented to you on a daily basis, you just aren't prepared for it.
I bet, with near certainty, you've met an amazing female designer/engineer already. You have probably met several. And you have probably met several that are interested in working for a company like yours. You just didn't know it, because you weren't engaging people in conversations AS people. You were trying to hire them.
You were trying to turn them into Human Resources.
by DannoHung on 4/22/13, 3:14 PM
by peterwwillis on 4/22/13, 3:35 PM
The problem is that women aren't getting paid enough. The problem is that women get treated with less respect, or are given busy-work, aren't given the same opportunities. The problem is sexual harassment. The problem is a lack of sensitivity. The problem is the boys' club. Etc, etc, etc.
NONE of those problems get solved because you hired a woman. Once they get the job, they still face all of the same hurdles the rest of their career, because you didn't do anything to fix the cultural disparity which is (one of the) reasons why there aren't more women in the field to begin with.
I mean... do you seriously think that the only reason there aren't more women in tech is because nobody offered them the job? There is no secret nation-wide cabal of hiring managers excluding women from positions. They're just not applying. Dealing with the reasons for that would be a lot more productive than wandering around college campuses with a quadrocopter looking for girls.
by Ugh_seriously on 4/22/13, 3:11 PM
If you hire a woman that is 50% as capable of another male candidate, that's asinine and you're an idiot.
by kefka on 4/22/13, 3:02 PM
Women are found severely lacking in the tech sector, due to "bro-tard" style workplace and management. Not to mention, not many women graduate from the heavy tech degrees from universities.
Is this not why affirmative action was created in the first place?