Creative networking platform The Dots is a prime example of an ethical tech company. We caught up with founder Pip Jamieson to learn what has made it so successful and how it helps businesses build diverse teams.
Previously, The Dots – dubbed ‘the next LinkedIn’ by Forbes – removed the ability for companies to search the platform for talent based on where people went to university. Now the London-based startup has gone a step further and launched a bias blocker tool. Recruiters can toggle it on to hide personal data (such as name, photo and educational background) from profiles, so people are judged solely on their skills and the quality of their work.
“It came about because one of our clients, AKQA, who have a blind recruitment policy in place, sent us a photo of how they were using Post-It notes to obscure the images of candidates,” explains Pip Jamieson, founder and CEO of The Dots. “They did that so they wouldn’t bias their hiring decision. It was a bit of a eureka moment for us.”
Helping companies build diverse teams is at the heart of The Dots, which has attracted over 300,000 members since Jamieson launched it from her houseboat in 2014. A remarkable 68 per cent of the community is female, 31 per cent BAME and 16 per cent LGBT. In contrast to LinkedIn, which is dominated by male white-collar workers, The Dots caters for what Jamieson calls “no-collar professionals” – essentially creators, freelancers and entrepreneurs who adopt non-linear careers.
“While I was at MTV, I noticed a very different way of working had started to emerge,” Jamieson recalls. “Traditionally, people would spend five, 10 or 15 years in one job and work their way up a career ladder. It was very CV-based. But at MTV people were increasingly freelancing, working project by project and they all seemed to have side hustles going on. Some had their own startup on the side. It was a more fluid way of working.”
Bu hikaye NET dergisinin March 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye NET dergisinin March 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Camille Gribbons
UX designer at Booking.com, Camille Gribbons reveals how she first got into the industry
THE 5G UI REVOLUTION
Tris Tolliday describes his vision of a web UI catapulted forwards by 5G
HOW TO SHOWCASE YOUR DEV SKILLS
Aude Barral shares 5 top tips for landing your dream developer job
KNIVES OUT
Murder mystery film, Knives Out, grabbed everyone’s attention, and so did the fun website that promoted it. Oblio tells Tom May how it created its innovative 3D navigation
HOW EMOTIONAL LABOUR HINDERS WOMEN IN TECH
Christine Brewis, head of digital marketing at Studio Graphene, discusses how gender parity in tech has changed over the last ten years, and what more can be done
EDAN KWAN
He swapped life as a singer for a career making eye-popping digital visuals. The Lusion founder chats to Tom May about battling demons, winning awards and where digital advertising is heading
ANDREW COULDWELL
The Brit in LA discusses his new book on design systems, Laying the Foundations
Top 5 Tips For Ensuring Web Content Is Accessible For All
Merlyn Meredith outlines five top tips for ensuring web content is accessible for all
WHAT DOES THE FUTURE HOLD FOR BROWSERS?
Nico Turco examines the state of play with browsers, whether developers should encourage diversity or monopoly and how Google fits into it all
YEARS IN THE MAKING
Exclusively for net: The latest in a series of anonymous accounts of nightmare clients