Imagine you have a coworker who is young and new to your team. You are assigned to a project with her in which the task is to build out a new ad campaign. When you get together to start the project, immediately and without thinking, you jump into an explanation of how to conduct market research. After listening to your explanation, your colleague pulls up an intricate project plan, showcasing the thorough ad campaign launch strategy she put together. Feeling slightly embarrassed, you wonder why you assumed she didn’t know how to conduct market research.
Psychologists Mazarin Banaji and Anthony Greenwald coined the term “unconscious bias” in 1995 and defined it as the unconscious attitudes and stereotypes that impact our understandings, actions, and decisions in an oblivious way.
In the above example, it was assumed that a young person who was new to the team lacked the knowledge and experience to start a project, and this assumption led to the decision to give her an education she didn’t actually need.
Though we might not recognize it, most of us have hidden biases that impact the decisions we make and the people we interact with. These unconscious biases can come in many forms, such as:
There are many reasons biases can form (social conditioning, personal experiences, associations made on a limited number of observations or experiences) - but as we try to create healthy cultures and communities founded on respect, there are several reasons we must uncover our hidden biases.
We know that unconscious bias can have negative consequences - so how do we address it?
Get it out in the open. If unconscious biases are hidden, the first step is to admit to ourselves that we have them and start questioning how they impact our decisions.
The second step is to look at the culture surrounding us and examine the messages we hear about certain groups of people. We must question these messages, asking if they are founded on prejudice and hatred rather than truth.
The third step is to start talking with others. If we leave the task of unpacking biases to ourselves, they may remain in our blind spots. As we discuss with others, though, they can shine a light into the back of our minds, where biases hide.
This month, Inclusivv hosted a conversation on Unconscious Bias with our lovely members as part of our Inclusion and Belonging Journey. We embraced vulnerability by sharing times when we acted on our unconscious biases, and we explored how we can shift from being carriers of unconscious bias to creators of psychological safety in our workplaces.
When it came time to share takeaways from our conversations, our members blew us away with their wisdom. Here are some nuggets:
“There are few people who step outside of themselves and think about others’ experiences. It shouldn’t have to happen to you to matter to you.”
“Prejudice is always destroyed by experience.”
“Unconscious bias is real. Be mindful of your own. You can only change what you acknowledge.”
“Don't trust your first impressions. You're operating on low to no information—maybe on bias more than anything else.”
To eliminate unconscious bias, our members recommended a few actions:
To create cultures where people are recognized for their uniqueness, we must be willing to get to know them on a holistic level, rather than making quick - and often incorrect - judgments about them.
Through having courageous conversations with others, we can unpack our biases. And as one of our members reminded us, “It is a gift to you to get to know someone else, and a gift to them to get to know you.”
If you want to experience the Unconscious Bias conversation and other topics on our Inclusion and Belonging Membership Journey, click here.