Most Important Developments For HR For The Week Of January 12th

Job Interviews Without Gender

In an attempt to eliminate bias, some companies are masking the gender of candidates they interview through techniques such as removing names from résumés and altering voices on phone calls. The writer believes such strategies reduce sexism in hiring but may mask the real problem: company cultures that drive out female employees. New York Times 

Filling America’s 6 Million Job Vacancies

As automation takes over repetitive tasks, workers will need to improve their digital skills en masse to work in new fields. That process may work better than it did in the late 20th century, thanks to data-driven tools such as LinkedIn’s Economic Graph that better link job seekers, employers, educators, and skills. The Atlantic

Top 10 Tips for Hiring Differently Under Salary History Laws

New regulations in California, Massachusetts, Oregon, and Delaware (and probably other states soon) dictate employers, third-party recruiters, and reference checkers can’t inquire about applicants’ current or past pay or benefits history, nor can that info be used to determine a new hire’s salary. HR should educate staffers and applicants on the new law, monitor recruiting practices, and instead find viable candidates by asking them for salary targets, being transparent about ranges offered, establishing fixed salary formulas, and/or disallowing salary negotiations. ERE.net

As work evolves, culture has to keep up

Culture is a major buzzword in HR as companies struggle to create positive work experiences (leading to positive business outcomes) while adjusting to the #MeToo movement, the gig economy, evolving technology that’s produced new HR tools, the need to compete globally, increased customer needs, and expectations of younger workers. Building employer-employee relationships remains paramount. HR Dive

Goals for the New Year: Prevent and Better Defend Employment Claims

Minimize the risk of employment discrimination charges and employment lawsuits this year by setting clear expectations for employees; maintaining signed forms that confirm related training and communications; offering employee coaching and counseling to improve performance and/or put offenders on notice; and remaining consistent with enforcement, always weighing current decisions against past decisions. National Law Review

Like what you were reading? We’ve got a lot more to share!Click here to check out other HROI articles and interviews.

Read Next


More Human

Ensure your exiting employees are focusing on their careers – rather than their frustrations.

Modern Outplacement

Our coaching-first model puts the focus on dedicated coaching and great job search technology.

Career Management

Tap into the real potential of your workforce with our Career Management services.

Executive Coaching

Maximize your professional potential through our targeted executive coaching programs.