This is your Member Reference Number (MRN). You’ll need to provide this when you make an appointment with an EAP counselor or contact your EAP by phone.

Anthem provides automatic translation into multiple languages, courtesy of Google Translate. This tool is provided for your convenience only. The English language version is considered the most accurate, and in the event of a discrepancy between the translations, the English version will prevail. This translation tool is not controlled by Anthem, and the Anthem Privacy Statement will not apply. Please read Google's privacy statement. If you want Google to translate the Anthem website, select a language.

Benefits with The Local Choice

Your EAP offers these great resources.

Understanding and Recognizing Bias in the Workplace

Bias is a preference or tendency that can be for or against a person, group, or thing when compared to another. This definition suggests that bias is something prevalent in all aspects of life. While some biases, like your preference to eat at your favorite restaurant, may be harmless, other biases can lead to unfair conditions and judgment, and unethical discrimination. Prejudice is a type of bias against a person or a group of people that is based on preconceived judgment or opinion. When people act on these prejudicial attitudes, it is called discrimination.

Bias can be conscious or unconscious, and it can have serious implications in the workplace. For a business professional or a business owner, understanding, recognizing, and addressing bias, prejudice, and discrimination is an essential part of being a leader with integrity.

Conscious Bias

Conscious bias refers to the attitudes, inclinations, and beliefs that you are aware you hold about someone or something. What biases do you hold, and how might they influence the choices you make at work? It is important to recognize the influence of bias on the decisions you make for your organization. When considering potential options, think about the different preferences you have that may be influencing your choices. Once you have become aware of the biases you hold, you can attempt to limit the influence of harmful biases on your decisions.

Unconscious Bias

Unconscious biases are preferences that you may not be aware that you have, even if you engage in self-reflection. For example, you might not have a conscious preference for a certain type of job candidate, but your hiring decisions might indicate that you are more likely to hire people that are similar to you. Thus, even if you are not consciously saying that you prefer candidates similar to you, your decisions reflect that you do have such a preference.

Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice is based on preconceived judgments about a person or a group of people. This is harmful because it means you reach a judgment before actually gathering information. When people act on these uninformed judgments, it becomes discrimination. Discrimination leads to unfair advantages and disadvantages for groups of people based on prejudicial attitudes.

To lead with integrity, you must work to reduce prejudice and discrimination. It is important to ensure that everyone has the same opportunities regardless of their gender, race, age, or background.

How can you reduce bias, prejudice, and discrimination?

Understanding the different types of biases and their impact can help people to recognize their own biases and know how to improve. If you recognize that everyone has preferences, some founded, some not, you can then attempt to limit the negative impact of bias on your decisions. One of the best ways to reduce bias in your decision-making is by having clear objectives for decisions you are making. This helps reduce the influence of prejudicial attitudes in decision-making and, in turn, helps reduce discrimination.

For example, if you are making a hiring decision, it helps to clearly outline the tasks one would perform within the job you are hiring for. By then structuring your assessment of candidates around those tasks and focusing on those who are best qualified, you will provide the best for your company. Clear objectives help make sure that you and others are hiring based on reasonable, job-related information and not based on uninformed biases.

As a leader, you can work to confront bias, prejudice, and discrimination with your own self-reflection. In doing so, you model the behaviors that others can replicate, which helps to create a more inclusive environment and find the best talent for your organization.

Further Reading

Google re:Work's lesson on Unbiasing
Link opens in a new windowhttps://rework.withgoogle.com/subjects/unbiasing

Society for Human Resource Management's resources for reducing biases in hiring
Link opens in a new windowhttps://www.shrm.org/hr-today/news/hr-news/pages/preventing-implicit-bias-hiring.aspx

Academic articles on reducing discrimination in the workplace in the journal Personnel Assessment and Decisions
Link opens in a new windowhttps://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/pad/vol5/iss2


About the Author

Amanda Hinojosa is an assistant professor of management in the Howard University School of Business. She teaches and researches on topics related to leadership, recruitment, and selection, and diversity.

Hinojosa, A. (2019, October 17). Understanding and recognizing bias in the workplace. Retrieved February 3, 2023, from the Young Leaders of America Initiative (YLAI) website: https://ylai.state.gov

More about this Topics

  • Pregnancy Discrimination in the Workplace

  • Race and Color Discrimination in the Workplace

  • Disability Discrimination in the Workplace

  • Federal Laws: Bullying and Gay Youth

  • Age Discrimination in the Workplace

Other Topics

    • Can my employer question my religious beliefs?
    • Fighting Rental Housing Discrimination FAQ
    • Tenants Rights: When to Hire a Lawyer
    • Do I have to ask coworkers to work on my Sabbath day?
    • Does my coworker have a right to proselytize at work?
    • Microaggressions
    • Religious Discrimination in the Workplace
    • National Origin Discrimination in the Workplace
    • Implicit Bias and Stereotype Threat