Can the Blendoor blind hiring app help solve Silicon Valley's diversity issue?

Jimi Swagger

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Kudos to her...

Screen%20Shot%202017-01-24%20at%202.51.19%20PM.png

Stephanie Lampkin, creator of Blendoor

Stephanie Lampkin isn't the typical tech CEO. As a black woman, she is somewhat of a rarity in Silicon Valley, where over 83 percent of tech executives are white and nearly 80 percent are male. The lack of diversity in the tech sector is what inspired Lampkin to create Blendoor, a blind recruiting app that anonymizes user profiles to eliminate bias from the hiring process.

Lampkin, 32, came up with the idea for Blendoor after her own experience with discrimination. She was rejected after eight rounds of interviews for a position at a major tech company. “I learned to code at the age of 13, was a full stack developer by 15, and have an engineering degree from Stanford, but they said I was not technical enough,” Lampkin recalled. “And the role wasn't even a very technical role.

“That was a wake-up call for me to the effects of bias, unconscious or not.”

Her feelings of frustration were reinforced in the fall of 2014, when many Silicon Valley companies released their annual diversity EEO-1 data, which showed only 20 percent of leadership in the high-tech sector were Women, 3 percent Latino, and just 2 percent African-American. The numbers brought to light some of the ways Silicon Valley could be discriminatory by design, and it gave Lampkin the motivation she needed to turn an idea into a company.

Many technology companies blamed the lack of diversity on a pipeline issue, but Lampkin realized the data was only part of the story. “They said there weren't enough qualified women and people of color to hire, but I knew from my own experience that wasn't the case,” Lampkin explained. “And I wanted to create a platform that could use data to reveal it's not just a pipeline issue.”

Blendoor hides each candidate’s name, photo, and age, making it so that the only things employers can see are their skills, work experience, and education. “By doing this we are able to circumvent bias when it comes to things like gender or the way a name sounds which can determine response rate,” Lampkin said.
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Of course, Blendoor alone can’t solve Silicon Valley’s diversity issues. Lampkin says there are several key changes the tech industry will need to make. “One problem is these companies are recruiting from a small number of Ivy League schools,” she said. “They need to expand the hiring pool to include schools they don't traditionally recruit from, small states schools and historically black schools.” Inclusivity is another issue. “They say diversity is inviting someone to the party; inclusivity is asking them to dance. It's not just enough to hire them it's about making them comfortable enough to speak up.”

Lampkin believes the data collected once a candidate is in the hiring pipeline can shed light on barriers to entry that marginalized groups face. “I think it's important companies know they will be held accountable by the data and performance metrics,” she said. To that end, Blendoor will soon introduce a scoring system, called the Blendoor score, that will “rate companies and rank them” based on things like how many women and minorities progress through the hiring process and how far these candidates go. “Hopefully we will be a part of a broader de facto recruiting standard in the future, and see this implemented across the board.”

“I wanted to create a platform that could use data to reveal it's not just a pipeline issue.”

Lampkin says her vision is to extend Blendoor’s technology beyond hiring and to explore other possible applications in the healthcare industry and the sharing economy, “where things like race can have an impact on diagnosis” or customer approval.

Blendoor has already seen some successes, the company just launched its beta and will be introducing its next version in early 2017. The company will be closing its first fundraising round in February, but with just $250,000 raised to date, it still has a long way to meet its $1.5 million goal. Only about a dozen black female entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley have been able to hit the million-dollar-funding mark.

That’s not the obstacle that Lampkin worries about. “My biggest challenge is staying motivated and inspired when coming up against so many brick walls,” she said. It’s the thought of the next generation of workers that inspires her.

“I make it a point to be very visible in hopes it will reach a young girl like me that doesn't have as much exposure,” she said. “That's what keeps me going.”
 

Cynic

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00000000000000000000000000008230Hiring from a pool Ivy League schools isn't a "problem" to be fixed. It's how you get the best candidates....

There's simply not enough black American kids going to Ivy League schools to solve this issue...


The real issue is the school system and priorities in the AA community but then again diaspora black kids are outperforming everyone so ...is this a cultural thing ?


Either way her efforts are misplaced even though they come from a good place....
 

David_TheMan

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Nice PR spin for her company, but the idea is stupid on its face.
As if racism is a mistake and not know and accepted behavior. smh
They don't want an app that hires blind, these companies and people want to hire and will hire people who look like and think like them.
You can't solve something that people actively work to keep going.
 

You Win Perfect

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Nice PR spin for her company, but the idea is stupid on its face.
As if racism is a mistake and not know and accepted behavior. smh
They don't want an app that hires blind, these companies and people want to hire and will hire people who look like and think like them.
You can't solve something that people actively work to keep going.
:francis: she thinks an app will stop racism
 

videogamestashbox.com

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I'm glad the root called this for what it is :ufdup:

I don't challenge her talent
I don't challenge her sentiment
I challenge her conclusions
(that her sentiment drove her to arrive at as a means of making use of her talents in an industry that wants cheap foreign labor via visa or homogeneous labor ...if they're paying full price)

Stop asking for an "oscar"(so to speak) and build your own industry.
The thing that really gets me as a person in that field(software engineering) is that software is the one field were you need very little money to do anything starting out, just time and talent.

Story:
In my senior year of software engineering at Auburn University I was also working in the engineering colleges I.T. dept. Doing...
1. web integrations(PHP/HTML5/M.S. sharepoint) visualizing raw data coming in from the labs
2. sub contract work with the Alabama dept of transportation via civil Eng department adding a "report system" to a bridge scour tool that was made by a previous PHD candidate
3. game development pipeline efficiency as an undergraduate research project(they fukk'n give you money & class credit to do these bruh!!!)
4. co built & managed a game room from scratch in the new student union
5. in talks to work in the library on a virtual tour 3D visualization for the University Library(but they were wanting me to do I.T. work as well not just the tour project)
6. was about to start building a ticket system for tracking work orders that needed to be done at the engineering I.T. dept
7. etc etc etc ...oh yeah and school.
It hit hit me I was doing waaaay to much shyt :damn: and needed to focus on finishing my senior year instead of doing all these damn side projects :mindblown: So I finished 1-4 dropped 5 and got a student loan and left the Eng I.T. dept. so I could fast track that last year. :wow: In doing so I realized that while school was paid for ...books, rent, food, gas, etc wasn't :dwillhuh:(I had never got a student loan before I worked my way through)

I ended up leaving school that senior year to look for another employment arrangement and ended up working from home doing contract work. The first contract with AT&T abruptly ended when they had an "issue" in mexico that caused them to in house various services.:dwillhuh: I got upset :pacspit: and said bruh you smarter than to get caught out here like this:jbhmm: at the whim of someone randomly shutting down your income.:patrice: Make your own damn income. :jbhmm:


So I decided with no income coming in to start an online business videogamestashbox.com
photo_38_5895bdf5ed7c4.jpg


that started out with only one service...​

1. Flat price games trade service
photo_40_5895bdf6cf52c.jpg


eventually expanding from game trades to a second service under the umbrella...​

2. Gaming social media hub for black gaming media, players, and content creators.
photo_4_5700fea2d1ee7.jpg

All this with no income coming in!


Conclusion:
You don't need tons of money to do anything in software all you need is a half decent computer, time, and talent.
I'm sure she is way more talented then me, hell I still need to finish my fukk'n senior year of software engineering.
When I hear people in the software field complain about hiring I'm like :mindblown: ...cause in the grand scale of things it cost peanuts to write software and put out product.
Now:whoa: I get that not everyone has an idea that they can work on. But still :scust: ...network, find a small project you believe in, and jump on the team:ufdup:
In addition to looking for "regular" employment:hubie:......:jbhmm:
 
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You Win Perfect

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I'm glad the root called this for what it is :ufdup:

I don't challenge her talent
I don't challenge her sentiment
I challenge her conclusions
(that her sentiment drove her to arrive at as a means of making use of her talents in an industry that wants cheap foreign labor via visa or homogeneous labor ...if they're paying full price)

Stop asking for an "oscar"(so to speak) and build your own industry.
The thing that really gets me as a person in that field(software engineering) is that software is the one field were you need very little money to do anything starting out, just time and talent.

Story:
In my senior year of software engineering at Auburn University I was also working in the engineering colleges I.T. dept. Doing...
1. web integrations(PHP/HTML5/M.S. sharepoint) visualizing raw data coming in from the labs
2. sub contract work with the Alabama dept of transportation via civil Eng department adding a "report system" to a bridge scour tool that was made by a previous PHD candidate
3. game development pipeline efficiency as an undergraduate research project(they fukk'n give you money & class credit to do these bruh!!!)
4. co built & managed a game room from scratch in the new student union
5. in talks to work in the library on a virtual tour 3D visualization for the University Library(but they were wanting me to do I.T. work as well not just the tour project)
6. was about to start building a ticket system for tracking work orders that needed to be done at the engineering I.T. dept
7. etc etc etc ...oh yeah and school.
It hit hit me I was doing waaaay to much shyt :damn: and needed to focus on finishing my senior year instead of doing all these damn side projects :mindblown: So I finished 1-4 dropped 5 and got a student loan and left the Eng I.T. dept. so I could fast track that last year. :wow: In doing so I realized that while school was paid for ...books, rent, food, gas, etc wasn't :dwillhuh:(I had never got a student loan before I worked my way through)

I ended up leaving school that senior year to look for another employment arrangement and ended up working from home doing contract work. The first contract with AT&T abruptly ended when they had an "issue" in mexico that caused them to in house various services.:dwillhuh: I got upset :pacspit: and said bruh you smarter than to get caught out here like this:jbhmm: at the whim of someone randomly shutting down your income.:patrice: Make your own damn income. :jbhmm:


So I decided with no income coming in to start an online business videogamestashbox.com
photo_38_5895bdf5ed7c4.jpg


that started out with only one service...​

1. Flat price games trade service
photo_40_5895bdf6cf52c.jpg


eventually expanding from game trades to a second service under the umbrella...​

2. Gaming social media hub for black gaming media, players, and content creators.
photo_4_5700fea2d1ee7.jpg

All this with no income coming in!


Conclusion:
You don't need tons of money to do anything in software all you need is a half decent computer, time, and talent.
I'm sure she is way more talented then me, hell I still need to finish my fukk'n senior year of software engineering.
When I hear people in the software field complain about hiring I'm like :mindblown: ...cause in the grand scale of things it cost peanuts to write software and put out product.
Now:whoa: I get that not everyone has an idea that they can work on. But still :scust: ...network, find a small project you believe in, and jump on the team:ufdup:
In addition to looking for "regular" employment:hubie:......:jbhmm:
I think the problem is as you noted that not everyone has that "let me start my own shyt" mindset. they need someone to give them a task or idea first. A lot of people need a "boss" to tell them what to do otherwise they have no direction. Of course thats a problem.

also congratulations on doing your own thing
 

Jimi Swagger

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I'm glad the root called this for what it is :ufdup:

I don't challenge her talent
I don't challenge her sentiment
I challenge her conclusions
(that her sentiment drove her to arrive at as a means of making use of her talents in an industry that wants cheap foreign labor via visa or homogeneous labor ...if they're paying full price)

Stop asking for an "oscar"(so to speak) and build your own industry.
The thing that really gets me as a person in that field(software engineering) is that software is the one field were you need very little money to do anything starting out, just time and talent.

Story:
In my senior year of software engineering at Auburn University I was also working in the engineering colleges I.T. dept. Doing...
1. web integrations(PHP/HTML5/M.S. sharepoint) visualizing raw data coming in from the labs
2. sub contract work with the Alabama dept of transportation via civil Eng department adding a "report system" to a bridge scour tool that was made by a previous PHD candidate
3. game development pipeline efficiency as an undergraduate research project(they fukk'n give you money & class credit to do these bruh!!!)
4. co built & managed a game room from scratch in the new student union
5. in talks to work in the library on a virtual tour 3D visualization for the University Library(but they were wanting me to do I.T. work as well not just the tour project)
6. was about to start building a ticket system for tracking work orders that needed to be done at the engineering I.T. dept
7. etc etc etc ...oh yeah and school.
It hit hit me I was doing waaaay to much shyt :damn: and needed to focus on finishing my senior year instead of doing all these damn side projects :mindblown: So I finished 1-4 dropped 5 and got a student loan and left the Eng I.T. dept. so I could fast track that last year. :wow: In doing so I realized that while school was paid for ...books, rent, food, gas, etc wasn't :dwillhuh:(I had never got a student loan before I worked my way through)

I ended up leaving school that senior year to look for another employment arrangement and ended up working from home doing contract work. The first contract with AT&T abruptly ended when they had an "issue" in mexico that caused them to in house various services.:dwillhuh: I got upset :pacspit: and said bruh you smarter than to get caught out here like this:jbhmm: at the whim of someone randomly shutting down your income.:patrice: Make your own damn income. :jbhmm:


So I decided with no income coming in to start an online business videogamestashbox.com
photo_38_5895bdf5ed7c4.jpg


that started out with only one service...​

1. Flat price games trade service
photo_40_5895bdf6cf52c.jpg


eventually expanding from game trades to a second service under the umbrella...​

2. Gaming social media hub for black gaming media, players, and content creators.
photo_4_5700fea2d1ee7.jpg

All this with no income coming in!


Conclusion:
You don't need tons of money to do anything in software all you need is a half decent computer, time, and talent.
I'm sure she is way more talented then me, hell I still need to finish my fukk'n senior year of software engineering.
When I hear people in the software field complain about hiring I'm like :mindblown: ...cause in the grand scale of things it cost peanuts to write software and put out product.
Now:whoa: I get that not everyone has an idea that they can work on. But still :scust: ...network, find a small project you believe in, and jump on the team:ufdup:
In addition to looking for "regular" employment:hubie:......:jbhmm:

Still think multigenerational Black Americans need to make inroads in tech and if blind hiring may help why not try it. Rideshare, dating apps, and even gaming is ok and good for profit but if isn't a viable product that provides employment for others than it's to no avail. Silicon Valley has it's share of frivolous startups as well. The experience of working with diverse people in SDLC helps one become a better programmer instead of self study. After college I was lucky to land a job with Fortune 500 companies which allowed me to live on both coasts, abroad as well accumulate savings to invest in my/spouse own ventures before early 30s. Also noticed it is much harder to land tech jobs in California as a Black person than DC/Atlanta/Dallas markets. I think her idea is admirable but must have companies willing to go beyond their UC Berkeley and Stanford graduate comfort zone. There will never be any black owned NVIDAS, Microsofts, etc if brehs can't gain capital and experience. Just my observation.
 

David_TheMan

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Still think multigenerational Black Americans need to make inroads in tech and if blind hiring may help why not try it. Rideshare, dating apps, and even gaming is ok and good for profit but if isn't a viable product that provides employment for others than it's to no avail. Silicon Valley has it's share of frivolous startups as well. The experience of working with diverse people in SDLC helps one become a better programmer instead of self study. After college I was lucky to land a job with Fortune 500 companies which allowed me to live on both coasts, abroad as well accumulate savings to invest in my/spouse own ventures before early 30s. Also noticed it is much harder to land tech jobs in California as a Black person than DC/Atlanta/Dallas markets. I think her idea is admirable but must have companies willing to go beyond their UC Berkeley and Stanford graduate comfort zone. There will never be any black owned NVIDAS, Microsofts, etc if brehs can't gain capital and experience. Just my observation.
No one will ever blind hire and if they didn't want to be racist they would simply stop practicing it.
This app isn't changing shyt, and its pointed in the wrong direction.
There is no reason to believe blacks can never enter tech sector, can never make chips, and etc. If you are already this self defeating might as well just call the white man your day and keep begging.
 

Jimi Swagger

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No one will ever blind hire and if they didn't want to be racist they would simply stop practicing it.
This app isn't changing shyt, and its pointed in the wrong direction.
There is no reason to believe blacks can never enter tech sector, can never make chips, and etc. If you are already this self defeating might as well just call the white man your day and keep begging.

Hiring qualified candidates based off skills and not bias is not the same as begging.
 

videogamestashbox.com

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Still think multigenerational Black Americans need to make inroads in tech and if blind hiring may help why not try it. Rideshare, dating apps, and even gaming is ok and good for profit but if isn't a viable product that provides employment for others than it's to no avail. Silicon Valley has it's share of frivolous startups as well. The experience of working with diverse people in SDLC helps one become a better programmer instead of self study. After college I was lucky to land a job with Fortune 500 companies which allowed me to live on both coasts, abroad as well accumulate savings to invest in my/spouse own ventures before early 30s. Also noticed it is much harder to land tech jobs in California as a Black person than DC/Atlanta/Dallas markets. I think her idea is admirable but must have companies willing to go beyond their UC Berkeley and Stanford graduate comfort zone. There will never be any black owned NVIDAS, Microsofts, etc if brehs can't gain capital and experience. Just my observation.

I agree tech is important and I have no prob getting experience from work:hubie::ehh: That's not a point of contention.. as a matter of fact before starting my website all of my work had been in desktop dev. Java,C++,Assembly,Uscript(for game dev), etc etc It was when they put me on M.S. share point integration that I had to learn PHP, HTML5,SQL, etc. I used that knowledge as a jump off for building my own.

What I'm getting at is that when I was ass out I dug into my skill set(yes some acquired via work) to build something for myself. I actually had a friend who does gov contracts as a javascript dev in Montgomery (maxwell airforce base) and New Orleans (Navy) who was like shyt,:patrice: if you doing all that web dev you should do what I'm doing.:ehh:

He threw me an 8 month contract listing in my town for Northrup Grumman who has an I.T. node at the research park in Auburn AL on the campus. They needed someone to work with hadoop servers ....I assumed visualizing data coming off the servers so that end users could do "something":yeshrug: with it.

While I appreciate the contract notice :ehh: I'm not sitting around waiting for it either :ufdup: which is basically my point :hubie:
 
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