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The Gendering of Job Postings in the Online Recruitment Process
Gender segregation remains a significant problem in many occupations and organizations. To solve this problem, many U.S. employers now seek to craft gender-neutral job postings. In this article, we investigate whether such employer recruitment efforts are successful in encouraging women and men to a...
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Published in: | Management science 2023-11, Vol.69 (11), p.6912-6939 |
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creator | Castilla, Emilio J. Rho, Hye Jin |
description | Gender segregation remains a significant problem in many occupations and organizations. To solve this problem, many U.S. employers now seek to craft gender-neutral job postings. In this article, we investigate whether such employer recruitment efforts are successful in encouraging women and men to apply equally for jobs. Specifically, we move beyond the well-studied effects of the gender typing of occupations, organizations, and industries to study the extent to which the recruiting language used in job postings influences the actual preapplication behavior of job seekers of different genders. Using unique data from both a large-sample observational field study (Study 1) and a field experiment study (Study 2) of real online job postings, we first assess the
gendered language
mechanism by testing whether stereotypical femininity in the wording that recruiters use to advertise otherwise identical jobs differently influences female and male job seekers’ interest in applying. We then assess the
recruiter gendering
mechanism by testing whether the gender of the recruiter and the femininity in the wording recruiters use when presenting themselves to job seekers further contribute to gender job search disparities. Our analyses ultimately show negligible effects for both the gendering of job postings or of the job poster, and we therefore conclude that, in practice, employers’ efforts to simply tweak the language of recruitment messages do not matter much for gender equality and diversity.
This paper was accepted by Olav Sorenson, organizations.
Funding:
The authors received financial support from the James S. Hardigg (1945) Work and Employment Fund and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sloan School of Management.
Supplemental Material:
The data files are available at
https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4674
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doi_str_mv | 10.1287/mnsc.2023.4674 |
format | article |
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gendered language
mechanism by testing whether stereotypical femininity in the wording that recruiters use to advertise otherwise identical jobs differently influences female and male job seekers’ interest in applying. We then assess the
recruiter gendering
mechanism by testing whether the gender of the recruiter and the femininity in the wording recruiters use when presenting themselves to job seekers further contribute to gender job search disparities. Our analyses ultimately show negligible effects for both the gendering of job postings or of the job poster, and we therefore conclude that, in practice, employers’ efforts to simply tweak the language of recruitment messages do not matter much for gender equality and diversity.
This paper was accepted by Olav Sorenson, organizations.
Funding:
The authors received financial support from the James S. Hardigg (1945) Work and Employment Fund and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sloan School of Management.
Supplemental Material:
The data files are available at
https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4674
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gendered language
mechanism by testing whether stereotypical femininity in the wording that recruiters use to advertise otherwise identical jobs differently influences female and male job seekers’ interest in applying. We then assess the
recruiter gendering
mechanism by testing whether the gender of the recruiter and the femininity in the wording recruiters use when presenting themselves to job seekers further contribute to gender job search disparities. Our analyses ultimately show negligible effects for both the gendering of job postings or of the job poster, and we therefore conclude that, in practice, employers’ efforts to simply tweak the language of recruitment messages do not matter much for gender equality and diversity.
This paper was accepted by Olav Sorenson, organizations.
Funding:
The authors received financial support from the James S. Hardigg (1945) Work and Employment Fund and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sloan School of Management.
Supplemental Material:
The data files are available at
https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4674
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gendered language
mechanism by testing whether stereotypical femininity in the wording that recruiters use to advertise otherwise identical jobs differently influences female and male job seekers’ interest in applying. We then assess the
recruiter gendering
mechanism by testing whether the gender of the recruiter and the femininity in the wording recruiters use when presenting themselves to job seekers further contribute to gender job search disparities. Our analyses ultimately show negligible effects for both the gendering of job postings or of the job poster, and we therefore conclude that, in practice, employers’ efforts to simply tweak the language of recruitment messages do not matter much for gender equality and diversity.
This paper was accepted by Olav Sorenson, organizations.
Funding:
The authors received financial support from the James S. Hardigg (1945) Work and Employment Fund and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sloan School of Management.
Supplemental Material:
The data files are available at
https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4674
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source | International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); 美国运筹学和管理学研究协会期刊(NSTL购买) |
subjects | Applicants augmented writing technologies Employers Femininity Gender gender diversity Gender equity Gender inequality Gender segregation Job descriptions Job hunting job search Keyboarding labor markets Management science Occupations Recruitment Stereotypes Wording |
title | The Gendering of Job Postings in the Online Recruitment Process |
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