Conversations about recruitment often treat “merit” as the only important issue and critics of gender quotas often rely on that assumption, too. But in her powerful column today — which coincides with her speech at the Driving Gender Diversity in the Workplace event — UN Women Executive Director Julie McKay turns those arguments on their head.
I did not get my job on merit.
Or at least not in the way that we typically think about merit. Consider a younger me, applying for the role of Founding Executive Director back in 2007 at the age of 23.
By virtue of years of experience alone, could I have been the most well-qualified, experienced person to start the staff team for the amazing NGO, then known as the National Committee for UNIFEM (now UN Women)? Of course not.
Like so many other roles (dare I say most), I was appointed based on a range of factors that influenced the decision of the Board. Past performance was absolutely a factor, and in my three short years in the full-time workforce (and a motley bunch of uni jobs), I had demonstrated that I was hardworking and dedicated to the organisations that I gave my time to.
But what outweighed past performance was a raft of entirely subjective factors. Today, as 200 business leaders gather in Melbourne for the Launch of the White Paper on Merit, I wanted to share with you some of those factors, in the hope that you too might challenge the assumption that merit alone accounts for success in the workplace.
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I think she did get it on merit in that she demonstrated she was the best person for the job by making the arguments she articulates pretty well and selection panel correctly made the call that those mattered more than say a few more years of work experience. I don't have a problem with that. I do have a problem with people who get a job (or even just an interview) in positions such as TV, banking, magazines, elite law firms etc that are closed to most people because their rich daddy made a phone call (I well remember Cosmo quite a few years ago ran a congratulatory piece on 'former Cosmo staffer Gretel Packer's [short lived] marriage' - her father of course at the time was the chairman of the company that owned the magazine). I'm less certain what we should do about it though as in most cases it's much less obvious that it happened.
Job network organisations will tell you that 80% of jobs are attained through people you know. So to get a job purely on merit, you are pretty special.