Editor’s note: Originally published in 2023, this post has been recently updated for accuracy, clarity, and relevance for our readers.
Planning on hiring diverse talent soon? Need a system in place to help you get there?
We’ve got you covered!
In today’s article, we’ve complied five strategies you can use to hire diverse talent.
They are:
- Have a diversity, equity, and inclusion specialist review your hiring process
- Partner with recruiters with experience hiring a diverse talent pool
- Use HRIS software to facilitate a blind recruiting initiative and reduce unconscious bias
- Network at diversity-focused job fairs
- Create job postings tailored to hiring diverse talent
Let’s take a deeper look.
1. Have a diversity, equity, and inclusion specialist review your hiring process
If you’re new to the diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) world, you’re bound to have practices in your hiring process that don’t support hiring diverse talent.
A DEI specialist can audit your current hiring process to help you uncover weak spots and opportunities for change.
When working with a specialist, clarify your hiring goals and why having diverse workers is important to you. Consider how your current company culture is promotes or hinders or your hiring initiative.
Be honest about where you can and should improve, and ask the specialist to help you create a hiring plan. Consider having them audit your internal company policies, long-term objectives, and company culture values to ensure a holistic approach to DEI.

Important note: Hiring diverse employees when your organization doesn’t promote DEI on all fronts can lead to ethical concerns and potential HR issues. Before going on a hiring spree, examine where your company falls short. Then, start taking action toward becoming DEI-friendly as a whole. In other words, don’t implement your hiring plan until you can officially call yourself an inclusive organization.
2. Partner with recruiters with experience hiring a diverse talent pool
Sometimes, hiring diverse candidates can feel like a full-time job. If you have a strict hiring deadline, don’t have an HR team, or cannot invest the time and effort yourself, reach out to experienced DEI recruiters for support.
Check out a service like Korn Ferry or search for DE&I recruiters on LinkedIn. You can also opt to use DEI recruiting software, such as SeekOut, RippleMatch, or Joonko.
If you decide to reach out to a recruiter, be sure to give them the following information:
- Your hiring deadline
- The roles you’re hiring for with accompanying job descriptions and qualification requirements
- Any DEI-specific goals – i.e., “We’d like to hire four black engineers who specialize in Artificial intelligence robotics”
- Your company values
- The core pillars of your company culture
- Facts that show you’re a DEI-friendly organization. For instance, hiring stats, proof that you have an inclusive workforce, and common DEI practices your organization follows
- The pay, benefits, and perks you’re offering
- The hiring process each candidate will be expected to go through, such as the number of interviews they’ll experience, how onboarding works, and any training requirements
3. Use HRIS software to facilitate a blind recruiting initiative and reduce unconscious bias
Have you ever heard of anonymous hiring or blind interviews?
You essentially use HRIS software to remove personal information from resumes, which could lead to unconscious bias throughout the recruiting process.
This method of hiring, often referred to as blind recruiting or anonymous hiring, emphasizes a candidate’s credentials, skills, and experience rather than their personal traits or demographic data.

The best part? You can automate the anonymization process to ensure recruiters only see each candidate’s pertinent credentials and experience when conducting their evaluations.
Personal information, such as names, addresses, dates of birth, and even profile images will be automatically removed. This promotes equality and lessens the possibility of unconscious bias based on traits like gender, ethnicity, age, or nationality.
4. Network at diversity-focused events and job fairs
Network at events hosted by minority professional organizations and diversity-focused job fairs to spread the word about the career opportunities you’re offering.
Consider highlighting your DE&I hiring initiative on your business cards so you can better connect with like-minded people, HR reps, and recruiters at these events. This will help shift the focus from merely exchanging contact information to your mission and commitment to hiring diverse talent.
This goes without saying, but when speaking with people at these events, get vocal about your DEI hiring plan and why you’re passionate about it. Do your best to find people who can help you support your goal or connect you with others who can.
5. Create job postings tailored to hiring diverse talent
And finally, make sure to tailor your job postings so candidates know you’re serious about hiring diverse employees.
Here are a few quick tips:
Make it clear that you’re seeking diverse talent
To attract a diverse spectrum of applicants, start with inclusive job descriptions that eliminate biased terminology.
Include a clause that specifies that you don’t discriminate against people with various sexual orientations, people of color, or people with disabilities. Remember to also note that you don’t discriminate based on religious background, socioeconomic status, or gender.
Here’s an example of a non-discrimination statement from the National Environmental Education Foundation (NEEF):
“NEEF is an equal opportunity employer. We will not discriminate and will take affirmative action measures to ensure against discrimination in employment, recruitment, advertisements for employment, compensation, termination, upgrading, promotions, and other conditions of employment against any employee or job applicant on the bases of race, color, gender, national origin, age, religion, creed, disability, veteran’s status, sexual orientation, gender identity or gender expression.
Please direct any questions concerning NEEF’s nondiscrimination policies to nondiscrimination@neefusa.org.”
Check out NEEF’s complete non-discrimination statement here.
Write inclusive hiring qualifications
Flexibility with your hiring qualifications is pivotal to a more inclusive workplace.
For decades, people without degrees or high school diplomas have been passed over for job opportunities, even if their skill sets align with the roles they were applying for. (Note that we’re not referring to careers that legitimately need degrees and certifications, such as the medical field.)

To truly open your organization to diverse talent, you need to be willing to train people without degrees, diplomas, or experience in the roles you’re hiring for.
When writing the qualifications section, focus on asking about unique attributes that show off the candidates’ personalities and experiences.
Here’s an example:
“We love working with REAL people with cool and diverse experiences.
So tell us …
Have you ever lived abroad? Do you know how to make the best pistachio macarons? Do you play multiple musical instruments? Can you speak a foreign language? Do you love knitting in your free time?
We want to know about it! Take a few minutes to reflect on some of your hobbies and experiences with us
Eliminate barriers to entry by offering to mentor people with zero or little experience
Be willing to train people who have skills but no experience.
Everyone starts somewhere. Imagine never getting the chance to start from the ground up in a particular role because a job posting requires three to five years of experience for an entry-level position! Sadly, this happens way too often. Just take a quick look at the job postings on LinkedIn or Indeed to see what we mean.
For instance, if you run a real estate firm and are looking to hire new agents, consider creating mentorship programs to help aspiring real estate agents from underrepresented groups enter the industry.
Pair them with knowledgeable agents who can offer support, direction, and practical advice on how to generate real estate leads, bring more traffic to their listings, and grow throughout their career journeys.
Mentorship programs promote professional development and can generate a sense of community and closeness within your organization.
Wrap up
And there you go! Today we covered five simple ways to hire diverse talent for your organization.
Ready to get started? Meet with your HR team or hiring panel to discuss next steps. Don’t forget to save this article for reference during your meeting.
That’s it for now.
To your success!
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About the Author

Jeremy Moser is co-founder & CEO at uSERP, a digital PR and SEO agency working with brands like Monday, ActiveCampaign, Hotjar, and more. He also buys and builds SaaS companies like Wordable.io and writes for publications like Entrepreneur and Search Engine Journal.
