Idea in Brief

The Problem

Conventional training to combat unconscious bias and make the workplace more diverse, equitable, and inclusive isn’t working.

The Cause

This training aims to raise employees’ awareness of biases based on race or gender. But by also sending the message that such biases are involuntary and widespread, it can make people feel that they’re unavoidable.

The Solution

Companies must go beyond raising awareness and teach people to manage biases and change behavior. Firms should also collect data on diversity, employees’ perceptions, and training effectiveness; introduce behavioral “nudges”; and rethink policies.

Across the globe, in response to public outcry over racist incidents in the workplace and mounting evidence of the cost of employees’ feeling excluded, leaders are striving to make their companies more diverse, equitable, and inclusive. Unconscious bias training has played a major role in their efforts. UB training seeks to raise awareness of the mental shortcuts that lead to snap judgments—often based on race and gender—about people’s talents or character. Its goal is to reduce bias in attitudes and behaviors at work, from hiring and promotion decisions to interactions with customers and colleagues.

A version of this article appeared in the September–October 2021 issue of Harvard Business Review.