bercrombie & Fitch engaged in "creative" recruiting to fill sales jobs with
candidates who matched the company’s carefully constructed marketing image. The
high-profile clothing retailer staffed its stores with handsome young white men
and touched off a lawsuit that ultimately cost the company $50 million and a barrage
of bad publicity. More than 10,000 applicants and employees received their checks
for damages in December 2005 after Abercrombie settled the suit.
Although companies generally operate in a heightened state of awareness about
the potential for discrimination charges during terminations, the possibility of
lawsuits arising from the recruiting process draws less attention. But faulty recruiting
and hiring procedures can generate claims from unsuccessful applicants. In addition,
employees who initiate lawsuits often reach all the way back to the hiring process
to show systemic practices.
Objective sourcing and selection standards are the key to staying on the right
side of the law, but many recruiters are still working with subjective criteria.
"Creative" evaluation techniques and the ever-popular "best fit" explanation for
selecting candidates can invite discrimination charges.
Abercrombie recruited for a certain "look." Some recruiters go on a "gut feeling"
about candidates or search for a match with the corporate "culture." It’s a subtle
landscape, but red flags pop up along the way.
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission filed the lawsuit against Abercrombie
for using image-driven recruiting and hiring practices that led to the exclusion
of minorities and women and limited their employment. As part of the settlement,
Abercrombie agreed to hire 25 diversity recruiters, set benchmarks for hiring women
and minorities, overhaul its recruiting procedures and end recruiting at fraternities,
sororities and certain colleges. A court-ordered monitor will evaluate the company’s
recruiting practices for at least five years.
Damage to the company’s reputation exceeded the direct dollar costs of the settlement.
"When a discrimination charge is filed, applicants are making one of the most
serious charges anyone can make short of a criminal accusation," notes Eric Dreiband,
who was general counsel for the EEOC when the agency moved against Abercrombie.
"They are charging that their civil rights have been violated. People fight over
money all the time, but a discrimination charge goes to the integrity and reputation
of the employer."
Companies with large, sophisticated staffing functions are more vulnerable than
they may think. On March 29, the EEOC filed a lawsuit against UPS on behalf of a
Rastafarian who was told he would have to shave his beard to be hired as a driver
helper. Two days later, it filed a national class-action sex discrimination lawsuit
against Lawry’s Restaurants Inc. on behalf of male applicants who allege they were
systematically rejected for jobs as food servers.
Applicants and employees file more than 75,000 charges with the EEOC each year
and the agency pursues more than 400 full-fledged lawsuits annually.
"Any midsize or large employer will experience some form of discrimination claim
through the EEOC or state law," says Dreiband, who is now a partner at Akin Gump
Strauss Hauer & Feld in Washington, D.C.
Setting objective standards
Abercrombie & Fitch was seeking a particular "look" for its sales force in a
retail setting, which is not inherently unlawful. "But if recruiters use a subjective
or ‘creative’ component in the hiring process, the employer must carefully review
the results for disparate impact," Dreiband warns. "The company needs to consider
whether this ‘creative’ component breeds discrimination. At Abercrombie, it created
a group of employees who were young, lily-white males."
Employers must use objective standards for selecting candidates. To the extent
that these criteria may have an adverse impact on a specific group of applicants,
the employer must ensure that the criteria are job-related and be prepared to demonstrate
their relevance. Otherwise, the company is open to charges that it uses artificial
standards to screen out a particular group.
"In addition, for any element of subjective decision-making, the employer should
involve multiple people in the hiring process, preferably of diverse gender and
race," Dreiband advises. "This provides a more defensible position than using one
decision-maker."
The nuanced skills and capabilities that a growing number of jobs require make
it more difficult to set sharp parameters for selection.
"But general statements used to explain selection, such as the successful candidate
was a ‘better fit,’ are almost becoming code for a potentially discriminatory practice,"
warns Margaret Edwards, shareholder at the San Francisco office of Littler Mendelson,
the largest employment law firm in the country.
Subjective screening and selection criteria often rest on speculation about customer
preferences or how a candidate will perform on the job.
"It is not inherently unlawful to not hire someone on the basis of speculation,
but speculation is a first cousin to stereotyping, and screening out candidates
on the basis of stereotypes is where employers get into deep trouble in the hiring
process," Edwards notes. "Engaging in subtle assumptions about applicants or customer
preferences can lead to charges of discrimination."
Ending speculation
A common example of stereotyping occurs when applicants are rejected as "overqualified."
"This presents a conundrum for employers," Edwards says. "The employer may look
at a highly experienced person with a tremendous résumé, and assume that the person
will have no interest in a lower position, or will only keep it until he finds something
better."
The assumption may be true.
"However, case law says that a person who is overqualified is, by definition,
qualified, so the person cannot be rejected on that basis," Edwards cautions. "The
rejection must therefore be based on other criteria."
She advises employers to avoid screening out seemingly overqualified candidates.
"If a person is truly qualified but not hired, the candidate may assume that
age discrimination occurred," she warns.
The best solution is to call the candidate in and ask why they are interested
in a position for which they seem overqualified.
"They may honestly be looking for a career change or less responsibility," Edwards
notes. "If there is evidence that the candidate has been job hopping, then you are
no longer simply speculating about whether they will stay in the job."
One of the earmarks of hiring discrimination is a selection process that is inconsistent
or does not match the actual pattern of decision-making when someone reviews the
entire pool of candidates. "For example, the employer may state that an applicant
was not hired because of insufficient experience, but the successful candidate had
less experience," Edwards says. "The reason given can be interpreted as a pretext
for discrimination if it is not true or appears to be contradictory."
Kathleen O’Toole, director of employment law and litigation management for Milwaukee-based
Manpower Inc., advises companies to drop the use of terms such as "best fit."
" 'Fit’ is a difficult word that can be a mask for discrimination," she says.
Recruiting and hiring on the basis of a "gut feeling" must go as well.
"It opens the employer to discrimination charges and makes it far more difficult
to reconstruct the selection process and explain why the candidate was hired," O’Toole
notes. "The story is harder to tell."
The required qualifications must make sense to the EEOC and its equivalents at
the state level.
"They are looking for a simple, fair process that treats all applicants the same,"
O’Toole says. "It is HR’s responsibility to make sure that recruiters and hiring
managers can articulate objective, neutral reasons for selecting an applicant."
Edwards advises companies to issue a policy that prohibits recruiters, hiring
managers and HR staff from engaging in conversations with unsuccessful candidates
about why they were not hired.
"Although HR staff may be well versed in the problems generated by these conversations,
direct calls to hiring managers are where many mistakes are made," she says.
Beginning at the beginning
Although lawsuits typically hit after an applicant has been rejected, the conditions
that can lead to a discrimination charge often exist long before the first résumé
arrives.
"Employers need to invest more time before they even begin the hiring process,"
says Juliann H. Panagos, member at law firm McGlinchey Stafford in Houston.
"Specifically, they need to prepare a completely accurate, current job description
that lists the essential functions of the job and the required and desired qualifications."
The employer must preset these job requirements before posting the position.
Panagos reminds employers that there is no potential for a lawsuit from any applicant
who does not meet the stated job-related requirements.
Crafting a job description based on objective standards is a critical preventive
step.
"For example, if the position requires work on one Saturday every month, state
that clearly in the job description," Panagos advises. "If you do, an employee who
is fired for not working on those Saturdays cannot charge discrimination based on
religious beliefs. If the job requires climbing stairs, state that in the job description.
Then you are protected from an employee in a wheelchair who claims discrimination
based on a disability."
Panagos notes that the courts generally will not second-guess an employer on
the requirements for a job.
"The law gives deference to employers in preparing the job description," she
says. "If the requirement can be linked to a business reason, it will generally
hold up."
Even if a discrimination claim is without merit, employers must respond, typically
by assembling documents, interviewing all the participants in the hiring process,
and then presenting all the relevant material to the government.
"A discrimination charge is very disruptive," Dreiband says. "It heightens anxiety
and emotions and generates morale problems. Even when the actual dollar amounts
that may be at stake are relatively small, a discrimination charge raises questions
about racism and bigotry."
The EEOC is now devoting greater resources to pursuing systemic discrimination
cases, which can generate awards that run into hundreds of millions of dollars.
The new EEOC initiative is another good reason to ensure that recruiters and hiring
managers rely on objective standards instead of a more expedient but potentially
more costly subjective approach.
Workforce Management Online, May 2006 -- Register Now!