Opinion ‘DEI Hires’ Don’t Lower the Bar. We Raise It. - The opposite of diversity isn’t meritocracy, but homogeneity. And in organizations where everyone looks the same, standards tend to be lower.

By Laura Morgan Roberts
Laura Morgan Roberts is a professor at the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business and the co-editor of "Race, Work and Leadership: New Perspectives on the Black Experience."
August 20, 2024

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Raising standards wherever they go. Photographs: Getty Images

“DEI hire” is a new version of an old insult. For the past 50 years, the term “Affirmation Action hire” hurled the same accusations of ineptitude. Then and now, the goal is to imply that the person is incompetent — even illegitimate — whether they are the vice president of the US, the head of the Secret Service, a hypothetical airline pilot, a Supreme Court justice, a mayor, or a college president. The criticism is clear: a DEI hire “Didn’t Earn It.”

The usual response is to get defensive, insisting that the person’s credentials are impeccable, and downplaying their race or gender. But race and gender are not superficial characteristics that can or should be stripped away in order to prove someone’s merit. And the reality is that, more often than not, such hires don’t lower the bar; they raise it. So maybe we should insist that “DEI hire” is a compliment — even if that’s not how it is intended.

DEI’s opponents insist that underrepresented or marginalized groups have cheated the hiring process or skipped the line in order to advance. But there’s no evidence that’s true.

To be clear, the opposite of diversity is not meritocracy. It’s homogeneity. And homogeneity, not diversity, is what tends to lower the bar. Homogeneity allows employers to remain too comfortable with the status quo and lets workers succumb to groupthink and other decision-making traps.

In homogenous companies, White leaders tend to be evaluated by less rigorous standards; they’re seen more favorably when they succeed and penalized less harshly when they fail. And in organizations with fewer Black leaders, Black employees tend to have more fairness concerns and be more skeptical about whether their organizations will act honestly and ethically.

In contrast, diversity, equity and inclusion raise the standard for performance. Diversity — whether of race, politics or gender — has been found to enhance group problem-solving and decision-making. Racially diverse juries deliberate more thoughtfully. Politically diverse debate teams prepare more diligently. Mixed-gender teams of scientists are more likely to produce breakthroughs. Exposure to people from different backgrounds leads teammates to pause, question their assumptions, and explore better ways to proceed. This has a measurable impact on outcomes, and has been shown to improve on-the-job learning, innovation and even safety.

Inclusion matters too. There are decades of studies showing that when employees feel more included, they contribute more of themselves and their ideas. Workers of all backgrounds are more committed to teams and organizations that they believe operate fairly. And when organizations actively seek to reduce bias in hiring and promotion, it results in a more level playing field for everyone.

And there’s yet another reason DEI tends to raise the bar: Leaders from historically underrepresented and excluded backgrounds must jump over hurdles of bias. These obstacles get a lot of attention from scholars like me, and the evidence on racial and gender bias is robust and consistent. It can also be dispiriting. But there’s a positive spin to put on it, too: Those who do get ahead often possess extraordinary qualifications.

Is it fair to expect women or people of color to be not only as good as a White man, but better? That’s a heavy burden. People like former Xerox CEO Ursula Burns and media mogul Oprah Winfrey represent rare, trailblazing success that many leaders try to emulate, but few replicate. And the pressure to perform better than everyone else contributes to mental and physical health complications, which can undermine performance.

Yet those who succeed can achieve exceptional outcomes. Their presence is expansive, redefining what leadership can look like and broadening the possibilities for everyone. For example, runner Allyson Felix ensured the first on-site childcare facility for athletes at the 2024 Olympics. Thasunda Brown Duckett, CEO of TIAA, has advocated for a series of financial reforms that would help the 40% of Americans who haven’t been able to save for retirement. Tennis legends Serena and Venus Williams have fought for pay equity for female players and invested in 85 companies, including 14 unicorns, largely led by underrepresented founders.

So there’s nothing wrong with intentionally bringing diversity, equity and inclusion to the table. In fact, it’s exactly what’s needed. So when someone accuses me of being a “DEI hire,” I will respond with thanks, knowing that I’ve “Definitely Earned It.”

Source (Archive)
 
Suggest if you hire for ability and character, the diversity and inclusion will be there. 'Equity' is bullshit. Everyone has different skills and abilities and expecting everyone to achieve the same results is insane.

The military used to be a meritocracy during my time, long ago now. Worked with/commanded great people of all races and worked with/commanded shitheads of all races. We had our share of 'affirmative action' officers, but as a rule they didn't go far, only knew of one who made full colonel, God only knows how. From what I saw the 'affirmative action' officers didn't have the ability or the work ethic, or just didn't understand how things are done. They tended to make captain but then faded away.
 
Not American, what's with the universal dip in 3rd from right?
MCAT is the medical school entry test, similar to LSAT for law school and GMAT for business school. GPA is grade point average, the average of their course scores.

The bars are in sets of 3, with the same MCAT score and high/med/low GPA. So the 3rd bard from the right is a low GPA with high MCAT score, and the next bar is a notch down on MCAT but much higher GPA.

So it's really just showing that low grades and high test score hurt you more than high grades and pretty good test score.
 
Western Civilization is going to resemble the third world or Kenshi
Has my judgement come so soon?
I had to thrall them all! Traitors siding with the niggers! Treason!

Now we are nothing! What was the point of it all?

Have you tried looking after niggers? They're retards!

As they grow in number, so does their capacity for retardation, and they won't even notice as they do it.

I was not the retard.

WREEEEEEEEEEE!
 
The ones in my field, the remaining boomers, who jumped that bar well before all this nonsense ARE good, and I’d imagine that they did indeed face more hurdles.
There’s such a huge gap between that cohort and the current one, and I would love to ask someone who is older and of a category where they had to prove themselves seriously what they think of the current crop. Alas that would be career suicide so it’ll never happen.
DEI is wrecking my industry, and ironically science already was international and about as prejudice free as you were going to get - when you work with smart people you tend to get the cream of the crop and it takes a lot to make us racist (the older definition, discrimination for no reason other than race.)
older black men in particular some of the most racist group of people I've ever met towards other black people I've got one older black friend and Oh my God you thought that guy was a lifelong member of the KKK he basically thinks that 95% of young and black people should be in his words put back in chains and forced to pick cotton.
 
Interesting how often I've heard about white guys being hired to clean up after code written by Indians.

It seems to be pretty common to have H1-B visa receipients who are subpar at their jobs, and the primary reason big employers want them is due to their compartively cheap cost. But sure, they're raising the bar with DEI - they're raising it so white natives of western countries don't get employed.
 
I think they're right about raising the bar, but not for the reason they would like to think.

They raise the bar for actually competent people who are White or Asian, both in terms of getting in the door and in terms of keeping the lights on.
 
It also means you’re working with fewer good people, so the people who are good have to carry more of the load . The usual 80:20 ratio is bad enough. Add in a load of people who shouldn’t be there and do nothing positive and it’s a big demand on the rest. (I needed someone with a PhD in something specific, and I dont give give a shit what colour they are as long as they’re competent, but ‘I’m kweer’ is not a qualification ….

Workloads have increased so much anyway with the constant need for line-go-up, then with a few per team being useless and morale breaking it really impacts us badly
 
Interesting how often I've heard about white guys being hired to clean up after code written by Indians.
My OH is a software engineer and back end dev who was doing a lot of that a few years ago. Not so much now, I think lessons have been learned, ie. Don’t be cheap, you’ll end up needing the expensive guy anyway.

Diversity — whether of race, politics or gender
Politics? Bitch, please. You just mean parachuting in some smug arrogant asshole with a set of oven ready fashionable opinions. ‘Diversity’ has nothing to do with that,
 
Years of #BlackGirlMagic have convinced negresses that they are special merely for existing. Some fat boonquisha who shows up late, never does anything well or on time, and has a perpetual stank attitude is raising the bar. Good to know!
Interesting how often I've heard about white guys being hired to clean up after code written by Indians.
The competency crisis is real. We’ve had to bring back old white men from retirement and pay them $20k-30k per month to unfuck things our diverse current team can’t solve. Eventually these old white guys aren’t going to do it for any price and that’s when shit will get real.

The problem is none of this shit is like a lightswitch where you bring in a couple white guys and the problem gets solved. True subject matter expertise takes time and white guys have been deliberately locked out for a decade, which means even if they go back right this very second, there’s going to a competency dark age for a decade, likely within the next 10-20 years. That of course assumes they unfuck their antiwhite hiring policies, which nobody is doing. All that matters is how good it feels to hire niggers, faggots, and niggerfaggots now.
 
Ah, there's the statistics they use to justify all this shit, certainly not massaged at all. I can believe the bar is raised for some employees, namely the ones who aren't one of the protected classes who now also have to pick up the slack for the diversity hires on their team. Metrics everywhere else are down.
Also, fuck them for saying anything about groupthink when it comes to "workplaces that look the same". When it comes to my normal work, I'm able to voice my dissent - if my manager wants me to work on a feature that I think is unreasonable/pointless/massively expands scope, I can at least say why I don't think it's the best idea, and he can at least take that into account. When it comes to any kind of mandatory DEI bullshit though? That's the time at work where a LOT of people are biting their tongues - even if their criticism is as mild as "dragging us away from our work and into these meetings are a waste of my time and focus". How the hell is ENFORCING groupthink going to stop it?
 
Turnover has skyrocketed at my office since the big push in the past year to hire more blacks in my department, as it's majority white and hispanic. Most end up fired for operating on CPT/no-call-no-showing, sleeping on the job, showing up high, or various combinations of the aforementioned activities.
 
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