Reverse Discrimination: Is it Really Happening?

Reverse Discrimination: Is it Really Happening?

The other day my husband was relaying a conversation he had with a buddy (let's call him John because up until recently there were more men named John who were CEOs of Fortune 500 companies than there were women). John was complaining he had not been selected for a local city board role. He said he was told that they were looking for a woman or Person of Color because their board was very homogenous. He also claimed that the person in charge of the search said they felt bad for passing on him because he was definitely more qualified than the other candidates. John was incensed and claimed he was discriminated against because he was a man.

Is it Reverse Discrimination?

Was this an overt case of reverse discrimination? It was certainly how he thought of it. And, it may have been. But, when we start looking at the issue holistically, a different story unfolds about discrimination in the workforce. The data is clear: women are underrepresented in leadership positions, they face bias and discrimination, and they are paid less than men for doing the same job. Most likely, the hiring group knew the advantages of having diversity of thought and were ensuring their own success by actively looking for someone who was not a white man.

It is entirely valid to want to diversify a board, a group, or a workplace. Diverse groups have a lot of benefits, not the least of which is a better bottom line. In order to diversify, we have to look beyond traditional qualifications and assess for talent. The most qualified person is not always the most talented. In fact, the opposite is often true. Just because a man has all of the qualifications does not mean he has the talent. If he was born on third base, it could mean that he was given opportunities that were not available to women and People of Color even though he wasn't as talented. In our culture and society, men are often given the benefit of the doubt even when they have not proven themselves. Women, on the other hand, have to prove themselves first before being given opportunities, creating a Catch-22 that leaves them out of the C-Suite and the boardroom.??

Diverse Teams are Successful Teams

When assembling a successful team, we have to look at race, ethnicity, and gender. We should consider socioeconomic, education, age, and disability status as well. A diverse team is hands down more successful at problem-solving and creating profit for companies. We should absolutely consider "lived experience" as a qualifier for roles because that lived experience can bring new solutions to problems that have never been considered and that affect a larger market.

This was likely the first time John had ever been passed over for a role that he was qualified for. He was angry and felt that the system was rigged against him. I feel for him because every woman out there has experienced exactly that. It just happened that he was in his 50s before he got to experience it, but women get used to it in their 20s.

Start with Compassion, End with the Facts

Men continue to be in the most positions of power, so it is incredibly important they use this power to be allies, which is why I wanted to bring up this concern. As a man in a position of power who is listening to another complain about being passed over, use it as an opportunity to educate. You can start with compassion knowing that he may be experiencing a fear of losing relevancy, purpose, and status. But it’s crucial that you acknowledge the significant bias against women in the workplace. You can point out that despite that he is smart, driven and has worked very hard throughout his life, he was likely born on second or third base, giving him a significant advantage in his career. Because he is a man, he was often hired on potential over a woman who had to prove herself first. Finally, turn the conversation toward how diversity benefits men. When there are more women in leadership positions, studies have shown that workplaces are more collaborative and innovative. When companies are more innovative, everyone wins. We have many social constructs that are just as toxic to men as to women that diverse leadership can change. For example, the idea that men have to be "tough" and suppress emotions can lead to higher rates of suicide and mental health problems for men. Women-led companies are more likely to create corporate cultures that support flexibility and have happier male employees who are able to be more involved in the lives of their children. A more diverse workplace is not only better for business, but it's better for everyone. Yes, John missed out on this singular opportunity, but no doubt, many more opportunities will rise in its place. In the meantime, the societal and economic advances from the choice are well worth it and he can be on the leading edge of that positive change.

Yes, it is still happening. It happened to my daughter recently, she was devastated as was I. I am not a stranger to discrimination, my family is hispanic. My fathers parents were from Mexico and my mothers parents from Spain. My father, mother and oldest sister are brown skinned with dark hair, me and my middle sister are light skinned. I remember my oldest sister coming to my parents crying because she tried to rent an apartment and they wouldn't rent to a mexican. Or my middle sister being chased home from school and beat up for being a mexican due to her last name, Miranda. And my father faced many challenges during his lifetime for being mexican but he overcame them and founded his own successful manufacturing company. This was back in the late 60's and I don't think it happens as often anymore but now we have to deal with reverse discrimination. I have never been discriminated against but when my daughter was recently targeted because she appears to be "caucasian", she was released along with a "caucasian" female while a "mexican" male was kept, it made me feel like it was the 60's all over again. Personally, I don't see color, I see the person and I think any type of racism is inexcusable.

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Jacob Ensign

Mechanical Engineer

1 年

There is no such thing as reverse discrimination, it's just discrimination. Most of the comments are people in favor of this overt discrimination, but it is unsurprising since they have the most to gain from this new wave of discrimination. Any company with gender or racial hiring standards is strengthening the grip these vile idealogies have upon our society. If a job lists any requirement outside of skill and ability, then it is gaslighting the candidates and denigrating whomever is chosen for the position; since they have no way of knowing their qualification or abilities landed them there. Particularly in this case, where the hiring manager told the most qualified candidate that he was being passed over because of his skin color and genitals. Racism and sexism in action. This article is atrocious and propagates the lie of the gender pay gap, a lie disproven over and over again. Women do not get paid less for the same job, if they are, they can sue. It's literally been illegal for like 60 years, it's not some big conspiracy secret. If it were true, there would be zero employed men in our capitalistic economy. But this ideology depends upon propagated lies and a shadowy ghost villain that nobody can actually put a finger on.

Jennifer Haas

2X CRO | $350M+ Exit | Board Member | P&L | Organic Rev Growth | PE VC Exec Operator | PE Advisor | Cross Functional Expertise | Sales Marketing CS Ops | GTM | B2B SaaS AI Tech | Healthcare | GE HPE Oracle Cisco Alumni

1 年

Nicely written Luann Abrams

Kristine Quine

Entrepreneurial-minded leader of high performing teams and organizations

1 年

Brilliant. Don’t confuse ‘qualified’ with ‘talented’ is a telling and eye opening perspective!

Heather Ficht

Executive Director at East Cascades Works

1 年

Love this! Thanks Luann

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