As human beings, we are conditioned to think and assume based on what we think we know, sometimes leading us to act with unconscious bias. Bias is usually based on our perceptions inherited through our kith and kin, influenced through what we watch in the media (news, TV and film) and sometimes based on our own experiences with other people.

The problem is when unconscious bias affects our perception of another person or groups of people in a professional work environment, it impairs our ability to act fairly and make the right decisions. We believe it is detrimental for individuals but it’s also bad for the business and workplace culture. After all, who wants to work in an unhappy environment or buy products or services from a business with a reputation of being biased?

So, what do we mean by unconscious bias, how does it affect your business and what can you do to reduce its impact in the workplace?

What is Unconscious Bias?

Unconscious bias enables us to make assumptions about others. It is a bias triggered by our brain making quick judgements and assessments of people and situations, influenced by our background, personal experiences, societal stereotypes and cultural environment.

Unconscious bias can be categorised as follows:

  • Visual bias: Making assumptions about a person based on how we view them judging by their appearance, the way they dress, etc. This bias is more commonly understood as stereotyping and is sometimes based on gender and/or age.
  • Cultural or social bias: Classifying people based on their culture or social status such as religion, social class, accent, job title etc. This sort of bias can cause exclusion in the workplace and give rise to groupism.
  • Experience bias: Biases ingrained from personal experiences and based on our values, morals and beliefs.

Having preconceived thoughts about people before getting to know them are likely to affect your working relationships with colleagues as well as customers.

Impact of Unconscious Bias

Unconscious bias may affect personal conduct and decision-making at work. There is evidence to suggest that unconscious bias seeps into decisions that affect hiring practices and workplace conduct in ways that can disadvantage certain groups of people. It can cause you to:

  • Treat colleagues and customers with prejudice;
  • Behave with discrimination or favouritism when it comes to performance reviews or promotions;
  • Miss out on retaining or hiring talented and dedicated employees.

For those individuals at the receiving end of biased behaviour, it can lead to stress in the workplace, affecting productivity, performance and morale. A recent survey reveals that the key cause of stress and mental ill-health at work is often down to poor treatment, including bias and discrimination.

The biggest impact, however, is on customers and how they view your business. As individuals, we are becoming more conscious of our buying behaviour and how it impacts our surroundings and environment, for example working with ethical suppliers. Therefore, customers are less likely to associate with businesses that have a poor reputation for biased behaviour or treating others less favourably.

Combating Unconscious Bias in the Workplace

You can reduce the impact of unconscious bias by recognising the signs and making a conscious effort to act fairly rather than acting on what you assume. Here are some helpful tips on tackling unconscious bias in the workplace:

  • Set the tone across the business: Starting from the top, ensure that you are adopting zero tolerance to biased practices such as discrimination, prejudice and inequality, and promoting fairness and respect in the workplace. Having a Code of Conduct policy will ensure that you are driving the message across the business and aligning your staff with organisational values.
  • Recognise and act: By becoming conscious of your biases, you can actively work at reducing them. The most important step is to recognise which areas of your business are exhibiting unconscious bias and act to change those behaviours. Develop a transparent and fair process for raising concerns and encourage staff to speak out confidentially.
  • Challenge the stereotypes: Educate your employees with training programs on equality and diversity in the workplace. Empower individuals to seek out opportunities to interact with people outside their normal social circle. Positive experiences that contradict stereotypes are known to help override biases and potentially eliminate them.
  • Empathise with those around you: Treat others the way you would like to be treated. Consider how you would feel if someone made decisions about you based solely on preconceived notions and assumptions.

We live in times when conversations around equality and diversity are more frank and transparent than ever. Whether we would like to admit it or not, we may have been guilty of unconscious bias at some point in our lives. What’s important is that we acknowledge our biases and work towards changing perceptions. We need to ensure that we are acting fairly towards one another and reducing the impact of unconscious bias while working with colleagues and customers.

Why is whistleblowing on the rise? And what does it mean for your business?

The increase in whistleblowing cases may be caused by increased awareness of the issues that must be reported to authorities, or because several high-profile cases have kept whistleblowers in the public eye.

Whistleblowing and data breaches

New figures from the Information Commissioners Office (ICO) show a huge increase in the number of employees reporting incidents of poor data handling. In the three months to the end of August 2018, there were 82 reports about potentially undisclosed data breaches, compared to 31 reports in the previous reporting period.

One factor that may be driving this increase is the new data protection rules (GDPR) that came into effect in May. This new, more stringent regulation may have drawn attention to the issues of data privacy and encouraged employees to raise their concerns.

Whistleblowing cases in 2018

There were several high-profile whistleblowing cases in 2018. These headline-grabbing stories may have inspired more employees to report bad practices and lost data at their own companies.

Noteworthy cases include:

International Petroleum

Two directors of a Russian oil company, International Petroleum, were fined £2m for sacking a former CEO who raised suspicions of corruption and bribery surrounding the company’s operations in Niger.

Barclays

Barclays was fined $15m for trying to uncover the identity of a whistleblower, rather than responding to the content of the report.

Marine Scotland

A Marine Scotland employee was tied to a chair and gagged by colleagues after she reported the bullying she had experienced at work for many years. A disturbing photograph of the incident, taken by one of the employee’s tormentors, was splashed across national news outlets.

Vodafone

A whistleblower from a Vodafone call centre contacted a BBC radio programme to report that employees were effectively discouraged from refusing access to customers who could not properly verify their identity. So much pressure was placed on meeting customer satisfaction targets that agents felt obliged to do anything to keep people happy – and earn their bonus. This became a security risk as scammers recognised that they just need to behave like a disgruntled customer to improve their odds of gaining illicit access to someone’s phone account.

What is whistleblowing?

In simple terms, whistleblowing is to report criminal, unethical or dangerous behaviours or practices – either to a regulator, police or the press. In some cases, employees report their concerns to managers.

Whistleblowing policies

While some companies are concerned about addressing whistleblowing directly, perhaps because of fears that it will cultivate problems and cause additional work , the reality is that developing a whistleblowing culture can help a business identify problems and address issues before they develop into a crisis.

Organisations that do not facilitate whistleblowing are more likely to find problems emerging in the press or via trade bodies or regulators, which they must then try to explain. If concerns can be raised internally, organisations have a chance to remedy the problem, and can then organise a disclosure to the relevant authorities. By self-disclosing issues and concerns, organisations can prevent the impression that they are out-of-touch or unaware of what’s happening under their watch.

Whistleblowing is likely to increase further in 2019. The question for charities, businesses and public-sector organisations is: do you want to take control of whistleblowing or do you want to be led by it?