How frequently do you think about the candidates who aren't applying? New research suggests great talent may not be coming to the table; but there's a way to get them to opt in
Consider a large-sized tech firm with a robust diversity and inclusion policy. It has identified that the majority of its programmers are men, which goes against its stated diversity goals. It has a comprehensive mentorship and career advancement program specifically for women; internal networking and peer support groups; and ambitious hiring targets to encourage a change in its historically male workforce. It has worked hard to ensure that it always chooses the most meritorious applicant.
Yet despite an investment in changing its internal culture, the company struggles to build a staff that’s reflective of the broader community — women simply aren’t applying, which leads the company executives to (erroneously) believe that the talent must largely be male.
“In much of the academic and policy work, we assume that all of the capable and eligible people enter the field,†says to Tanjim Hossain, professor of marketing at Rotman School of Management. “Companies don’t think that much about who we might be missing out on because the candidate believes that entering the field is too costly, relative to the perceived returns from the job.â€
A recent paper entitled “Maybe I should just stay home†showcases new modeling from Hossain and John Morgan (an economics professor from the University of California who passed away in 2021), demonstrating that even small perceived barriers of entry have a greater impact on a person’s decisions to apply or not to apply for a position.
At the heart of most decisions to apply for a job — or in the parlance of the study, enter the contest — is the perceived payoff from applying (i.e., being the successful applicant), which is influenced by two factors: a candidate’s abilities (their life-long accumulation of skills that make them capable of doing a job), and the entry cost.
[This article has been reprinted, with permission, from Rotman Management, the magazine of the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management]