Jun 13, 2019, 3:20 PM

@Ghost said in Accounting for gender imbalances:

@Sparks @faraday Just wanna pop in and say that I, in no way, was saying that or had any malice. Politics is just probably the base word to use, but I'm not that guy that groks too much on the whole Convservative vs. Liberal shit.
[ ... ]
I said the same thing everyone else did: choose the right people/good team.

I am totally willing to accept that there was no malicious intent in what you said. But, I really want you to genuinely step back from the situation for a moment and consider what I'm about to say.

Do you know how many times I've seen a conversation about "So, we have a pretty defined corporate culture, but we need to make some new hires and I'm a little worried it might be jarring or off-putting to a new guy to come into. Anyone have advice on how to make the environment welcoming to him?" get derailed by men stepping in and going "Just be sure you aren't hiring a guy because of political motivations, just to meet a quota!" and thus subtly shifting the conversation to being about whether or not a man was the best qualified for the job? Thus far, in my technical career, that would be 0. (Or nil, or NULL, or None, depending on your preferred programming language.)

Do you know how many times I have seen "So, I'm a little worried that we're a homogenous corporate culture of guys, and that could be off-putting to any women we hire. Anyone have advice on how to make a more inclusive and welcoming environment at work?" get derailed by a guy stepping in and going, "Make sure you aren't hiring a woman just for politics; if you hire a woman instead of a guy who can do the job better, it will hurt your team!" and thus redirecting the conversation from "how to be welcoming to the women we include" to justifying whether or not women should even be included in the first place? I actually cannot tell you, because I lost count years ago.

Somehow, the "be sure to choose the right people/team" topic shift only ever comes up when people are discussing how to make a work environment more comfortable for women or minorities. And after a certain point, it doesn't matter whether it's an intentional redirect or acting on an unconscious bias; the effect on the discourse is the same.

So I ask that you please step back and ask yourself, honestly, if you saw that first question in this post—"what are some good tips I should consider in making a welcoming environment for the new guy we hired?"—would your instinctive gut response to be "Make sure the new guy who you hired wasn't politically motivated; if you hire a man just to have a man, when a woman might be the better candidate, you'll only hurt your team." rather than giving tips on how to make a fun and welcoming work environment?

If not, then take a minute or so and dwell on that fact.

Like I said earlier, we—collectively, as a society—need to do better.

@Arkandel said in Accounting for gender imbalances:

There are other things we do need to adjust. For example we have two washrooms in our area, both men's... that's gonna have to change unless we expect a new hire to walk across the first floor to use the facilities.

The guys used to complain about restrooms on the engineering design floor not having enough stalls and how they'd have to wait in line. The first day, years ago, that we had a line in the women's design floor restroom? There was actually a victory email sent out among the women at the company (we made an internal mailing list ages ago) going, "Yes! There's finally enough of us that this happened!" and a fistpump GIF.