What can you as a recruiter do to improve the relationship you have with your hiring manager? Itβs not uncommon for there to be tension between the need to fill roles quickly and the need to be thoughtful and equitable in the process. You want your counterpart in engineering to feel like a partner in solving this challenge, not the one carrying the burden.
At the OneReq Summit: DEI in Recruiting, Tigran Sloyan, Co-founder and CEO of CodeSignal, spoke with Mamuna Oladipo, VP of Product at Shopify, and Wahab Owolabi, Founder of OneReq, about forming a strong partnership. Here are five key takeaways that you can use to build trust and properly prepare for diversity and inclusion conversations and initiatives with your organizationβs engineering leaders.
1. Communicate about values and expectations from day one
When youβre debriefing on a candidate, that shouldnβt be the first time that youβre interacting with your engineering counterpart. Instead, begin by sharing who you are and what you value, and ask about their goals and values as well. Both sides will benefit from leadership being on the same page and clearly communicating the value of whatβs being done and what needs to be done to meet your hiring goals.
Tigran noted that βrecruiters can go into those relationships expecting it to be strained or difficult…I believe in self-fulfilling prophecies.β The right attitude goes a long way, as does being upfront about how you work and what you need for support. Since the hiring manager already has a full-time job, theyβll probably appreciate having clear and simple processes to follow. Let your hiring partners know if youβll require certain training (e.g. interview training, bias training) and audits (e.g. tracking diversity metrics across your funnel).
2. Diversity is a journey, so meet people where they are
If you find that thereβs misalignment between yourself and the hiring manager in terms of your values and goals for the team, try taking a step back and think about diversity as a journey that everyone is on. When you look at a company, a team, or an engineering leader, everyone might be at a different point in that journey. If you can show empathy in understanding where someone is and try to meet them in that space, theyβre more likely to see you as a trusted partner.
3. Talk about representation when you talk about diversity
βThereβs this misnomer that diversity means black. Or diversity means women. I donβt think of it that way and when Iβve worked with hiring managers in the past, I try to define my philosophy on it,β Wahab said. βTo me, diversity means representation. Weβre in a tech space where thereβs a lack of representation of women and of people of colorβand itβs possible that we will get to a space where we donβt have that lack of representation anymore.β
Mamuna added, βYouβre trying to build the best products and tools for everyone and there are questions and opinions that you miss when you donβt have full representation on your teams.β
4. Build trust by building your domain knowledge
Itβs easy to say that recruiters should try to build trust with the engineering team, but how does that translate into action? One way is to invest time in the systems and processes that the team uses, down to the tools themselves, so that you can speak for the team and let candidates know what the job is really like. The easiest way to break trust? Get caught not knowing something essential about how the team operatesβlike whether the designers use Figma or Adobe.
5. Understand the skillset the team is looking for
From a hiring managerβs perspective, βI think the frustration comes from giving feedback and not seeing the candidates changing,β Mamuna said. As a recruiter, itβs your job to understand what a hiring manager is looking for in a candidate. And as someone who cares about diversity, itβs also your job to push back if the βfitβ is a certain profile or background instead of a set of objective skills.
On the other hand, Tigran added, βsometimes the friction comes from, as a recruiter I have no idea why someone was qualified as a yes or why they were qualified as a no.β So how do you learn about that skill set if youβre not technical? Wahab suggests partnering on a structured feedback system. From the notes that the team provides, βI can get a sense of βhere are the gaps the candidate had,β and I can have a trend and look for that and understand where the team is coming from with a successful candidate and one who is unsuccessful. What I do is take those notes back and use them in general conversation.β
We hope these tips have been helpful! OneReq is a community for recruiting leaders passionate about diversity, equity, and inclusion. CodeSignal is a platform for top-of-funnel assessments and remote interviews that lets you objectively measure a candidateβs real-world coding skills. Request a demo today and find out how CodeSignal can help you reduce the overhead for your engineering team while also broadening your candidate pool and fighting bias.