Wednesday, December 4 2024

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Non-diverse work forces deter new graduate talent.

The graduate recruitment platform Debut has release findings from its ‘Working with class: The state of social immobility in graduate recruitment’. The research, based on surveys and interviews has found over a third (35 per cent) of participants are put off joining a business if they perceive the workforce to be made up predominantly of middle and upper-class employees – extrapolated out this equates to 2.5 million young people.

The OECD reveals it would take 150 years for a child from a poor UK family to earn the national average wage. To couple this, the Social Mobility Commission reveals those from better off backgrounds are almost 80 per cent more likely to be in a professional job than their working class peers. This is costing businesses and the wider economy enormously: the cost of poor social mobility and workplace discrimination equates to a staggering £270 billion per year.

“Disadvantaged young people are still struggling to get ahead and face worse outcomes than their more advantaged peers,” said James Turner, CEO at Sutton Trust – who Debut interviewed for this report. “The UK is a particularly class-based society, which hasn’t changed significantly over time.”

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The research also found two thirds (66 per cent) of graduates felt they had to change who they are, including their appearance in order to ‘make a good impression’ during an interview. And the majority (64 per cent) of candidates said they weren’t able to express themselves as individuals during the application process. “We need more opportunities to show who we are, and our potential,” said a 21-year-old female participant, “filling in an application form or submitting your CV is not enough.”

James Bennett, CEO of Debut, commented on the report: “Our research reveals the majority of UK businesses are guilty of ‘professional exclusion’ and as such are missing out on a huge pool of tremendously talented young people from diverse backgrounds. This is not only stunting business’ own growth but also severely affecting the wider economy. It is imperative that businesses must do more than just pay lip service to diversity and inclusion and start taking real action to ensure they are in-step with modern social trends and viewpoints.”

Charlotte Leer, emerging talent recruitment manager at HSBC – who Debut interviewed for this report – added, “As this timely report shows – the scale of this issue is vast. However, all businesses should be taking steps to address this. For example, we’ve taken the bold decision to focus on a strengths-behaviours-values based approach. This enables all candidates to present themselves as they are, rather than how we would like them to be, while also removing the filters and biases arising from a CV-driven approach.”

Bennett concludes: “Today’s graduates don’t just demand equality – they expect it. And as graduates become increasingly more aware – and more vocal – about such issues, the talent pool will dry up for companies that aren’t putting enough of an emphasis on this.”

To download the full ‘Working with class: The state of social immobility in graduate recruitment’ report including interviews from major brands like HSBC, Cisco, WPP and experts like Sutton Trust click here.

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The Global Recruiter Newsdesk bringing you balanced journalism, accuracy, news and features for all involved in the business of recruitment from around the world

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