Equality Action Center Launches with New Study on Effective DEI Strategies for Businesses

A new Equality Action Center report details how evidence-based strategies help businesses reduce bias and improve employee recruitment and advancement.
Companies across multiple industries can use data-driven methods to reduce workplace bias and more effectively recruit, retain and advance the most talented employees, according to a new by the at 糖心原创.
Produced in partnership with and supported by a grant from Walmart, the report — Traditional Bias Training Doesn鈥檛 Work 鈥 Bias Interrupters Do — details two years of research testing out EAC鈥檚 tools in companies across the country.
EAC joined UC Law SF鈥檚 roster of influential programmatic and research centers on July 1.
鈥淲e now have masses of evidence that Bias Interrupters can help companies can make year-over-year progress on their diversity and inclusion goals,鈥 said EAC Director Joan C. Williams, a report author and Sullivan Professor at UC Law SF. 鈥淏ias Interrupters are also the best way to control for legal risk: They level the playing field and improve the workplace experience for every group.鈥
The report found that evidence-based interventions helped companies diversify hiring pools, reduce bias in their screening and interview processes, create fairer employee evaluation systems, and reduce disparities in work assignments that affect employee advancement.
U.S. corporations spent almost $8 billion on bias training in 2020, but many of those trainings are ineffective, and many corporate diversity programs fail because they do not use an evidence-based metrics-driven approach to leveling the playing field, the report says.
The Bias Interrupters program was developed to address the problem, documented by聽, that a聽company鈥檚 business systems聽(e.g., evaluation聽and interview processes) reflect the bias of people traditionally hired. This results in the continued hiring and promotion of similar people.
The report details how Bias Interrupters can be highly effective. After EAC鈥檚 90-minute Individual Bias Interrupters Workshop, a professional services firm saw the biased distribution of literal office housework (like cleaning up after meetings) between women of color and white men drop from 27 percentage points to 0.
Bias Interrupters not only leveled the playing field, they also resulted in improvements for all groups. At a consumer goods organization, the Bias Interrupters performance evaluations intervention resulted in a 52-percentage point increase in evidence-based feedback across the organization 鈥 meaning everybody was more likely to get this type of feedback.
The experiments took place in a wide range of organizations, from tech startups to massive multinational manufacturing organizations. The report also identifies issues, such as flawed data management systems, that organizations must address to make DEI programs more successful.
鈥淓ach organization made a serious commitment to collecting metrics and taking action,鈥 said EAC Research Director and report co-author Rachel Korn. 鈥淭heir commitments paid off in the form of better business systems and workplace culture.鈥
is UC Law SF鈥檚 newest center, launching this summer after growing out of the . EAC鈥檚 work carries on the leadership and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion programs from the Center for WorkLife Law. The Center for WorkLife Law will continue efforts to fight discrimination in jobs and education through research, advocacy, grassroots partnerships, and assistance to students and workers.