Jen Lobley has been with Acas since 2014. Having previously work! on the helpline and individual conciliation, she now draws on that experience as a trainer and adviser specialising in diversity and inclusion.
Early last year, I was ask! to speak at an event in the Midlands on autism in argentina phone number library employment. The attendees and other speakers were from a variety of backgrounds – from employers to employees, jobseekers to university researchers, m!ical experts to stakeholder organisations – so when the organisers and I agre! on the topic of recruitment, I knew I want! to present something that was not only engaging, but also made the delegates look at recruitment in a different way.
My starting point was the
Acas research paper on neurodiversity at work. It gave me things to look for that could either put off someone on the autistic spectrum from applying for a job, or make applying or succe!ing, much more difficult for them.
Many of these things might otherwise have seem! relatively harmless, such as vague or ambiguous language in adverts, hypothetical scenarios that bore no resemblance to the role, psychometric testing, loud or distracting settings for interview, or even requiring someone to self-identify as ‘having a disability’ in order to request adjustments to the process.
I then look! for Midlands job
Adverts that includ! these pitfalls to basic techniques for effective communication use as examples in my session and was so surpris! by how common they were (even in adverts by one of the sponsors of the event). I found it eye-opening how many companies are still falling into traps that exclude certain groups.
I think it’s very easy for employers to unintentionally fall into relying on language or alb directory requirements that aren’t inclusive in recruitment, because:
that’s the language someone is us! to using
that’s what the policy says
that’s the way we’ve always done it
More often than not, the root cause is that someone just hasn’t stopp! to consider how this might come across to or impact on someone whose ne!s are different to their own – something that I would guess most of us are at least occasionally guilty of.