[This article ran originally on the Harvard Business Review site, January 20, 2013.]
Many business conferences are notable not only for the prominent people on stage, but also for those who are missing. For instance, at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland this week, fewer than 18% of the speakers are women. Women’s under-representation at such events gets a lot of attention, but people of color are also relatively rare on conference stages. For conference hosts, however, past performance need not be an indicator of future results.
Since 2012, I’ve co-hosted The Lean Startup Conference with Eric Ries. Eric ran the event with another host for two years before that, and the speakers they drew, though good presenters, were almost all white men. When I began co-hosting, we put an emphasis on finding high-quality speakers who better represented the business world. In 2012 and 2013, not only did our speaker rosters comprise more than 50% women and people of color, but the number of conference attendees doubled each year.
We use the same methods all conferences use to find speakers: We invite people we know or know of, and we have an open call for proposals. But because those processes reliably over-represent white male candidates, we approach them differently than most conference hosts. Below are nine key steps we’ve taken to reduce bias in our selection cycle, convince people we’re serious and thus draw a more diverse group of outstanding speakers. Our conference in December 2013 had roughly 43% as many speakers as Davos does this month, but these ideas apply to events of any size. They also apply to almost any gated decision with a pipeline of applicants, including hiring, venture capital funding, school admissions, and awards.
1. As a leader, commit yourself to improving your selection process. Studies show that bringing in decision-makers from under-represented groups will help your organization attract more similar people. While doing so will likely improve your team and undoubtedly sends a positive signal, it’s not a magic bullet. First, people from under-represented groups can have professional networks like yours and the same selection biases you do. Second, if you make it the job of the under-represented person to draw in others like them, you’ll ensure that person’s priorities for choosing candidates are different than yours—thus inviting conflict and likely marginalizing their work.
The top leaders of your event, regardless of their own identities, need to share a commitment to changing your systems. By way of example, Eric and I are both white, and we have successfully drawn dozens of people of color to give excellent talks at our conferences.
2. Be deeply transparent. Of course, you need to have a sentence saying that you welcome people from groups under-represented in your community. But that statement will do nothing to surface good speaking candidates. Because people can either see that you have a record of excluding speakers like them or will assume, if your event is new, that it will behave like most others, they’ll logically decide not to apply—and a single sentence is not going to convince them otherwise.
Go much further than the sentence, writing in depth about how you’ve contributed to the problem in the past (or if your event is new, showing your understanding of how imbalances arise), and concrete things you’re doing to make change.
3. Look beyond the usual suspects. And tell people that’s what you’re doing. Many potential candidates assume that they have to either know you personally or be on the speaking circuit for you to pick them. If they’re right, you’re simply tapping the existing pool of speakers, and you’re missing opportunities to introduce fresh perspectives to your event.
Most conferences need at least a few marquee names to spark attendee registration. But as a curator, you can provide unique value by finding sharp people that everyone doesn’t already know. To attract those candidates, advertise that you’re seeking new voices and use thoughtful language.
For instance, if you say that you’re looking for people with “advice and expertise to share” rather than “experts,” you avoid suggesting that you’re interested only in people already recognized in the field. (Anecdotally, women are less likely than men to refer to themselves as experts, so as a bonus, you also avoid accidentally excluding them.)
4. Offer speaker training. If you’re trying to attract new speakers, you may well need to provide guidance to help them perform at the level your attendees expect. Even just offering it can draw proposals from strong candidates who are new to public speaking and can prompt managers to encourage promising stars to apply. For efficiency, you can deliver the actual training online and in groups. You can also pair experienced speakers with beginners for coaching sessions.
5. Request help. Once you have a call for proposals with a strong public statement about your process, you can point to it and ask other people to help you find great candidates. Indeed, simply asking people to recommend speakers from under-represented groups often turns up surprising candidates—including people your connectors wouldn’t have thought to mention if you hadn’t made a specific request. In addition, you can ask professional associations that have networks unlike yours to circulate your unusual call for proposals among their members. If your conference includes panels, require that panel organizers include at least one and preferably two people from your under-represented groups.
6. Approach individual people in your under-represented groups. Developing relationships with candidates is a long game, but it’s important, particularly because people who haven’t envisioned themselves at your event may realize they’re a fit only if you brainstorm talk ideas together. Be systematic and, for instance, every quarter, approach two people you want to get to know better and invite them for coffee.
7. Have a farm system. Hold more casual events where you can try out speakers you don’t already know and work with them to develop content and style appropriate for your audience. TEDx events have served this purpose for the flagship TED conference.
8. Save slots — as many as half — for people you find later in the process. The old ways of finding candidates generate good speakers more quickly than the new ways—but, as I noted above, the traditional methods will lead you to traditional candidates. So you have to sequence your decision-making, or you’ll inadvertently recreate the status quo.
One pitfall to avoid is announcing an initial, homogeneous list of speakers. Such an announcement can lead historically under-represented candidates to reasonably question your commitment to giving them fair review and prompt them to steer clear. Convincing people you’re committed is critical; don’t undermine yourself by asking them to trust you despite the evidence.
9. Take chances. Often speakers from under-represented groups don’t behave quite like the established pros you’re used to. They may seem less confident, which you interpret as less authoritative. Or they may use language differently, which you interpret as less professional. In those cases, your gut will often tell you they aren’t a fit for your event. Override your gut. Provide training and set them up to succeed.
After you’ve had a conference with a more diverse lineup of strong speakers, not only will you find it easier to repeat that success, you’ll also be in a better position to expand your attendee base. At Davos this year, just 15% of the participants are women. We can and should do better. Starting with your next event.
Every year, I send out a note to NYC friends, inviting them to join me on the Great Saunter--a 32-mile walk around the perimeter of Manhattan on the first Saturday in May. Every year, dozens of people reply enthusiastically, declaring that this year, they are definitely--definitely!--in. Every year, about three of those people actually show up, and all year long, everyone else says that next year they are truly--truly!--going to make it.
This post contains all the info you need to make this the year you really--really!--do the Saunter.
The event is organized by Shorewalkers, and I first tried it about twenty years ago--inexplicably inspired by this New York Times story--when you really needed a guide, because there was no path around the island as there mostly is today. It was a crappy experience. Held on a rainy day, the walk drew about 75 people. Only 13 of us finished, and I was the very last one. I hadn't trained for the walk, so I developed serious aches and blisters halfway through. I didn't have any friends participating, so I was lonely. Plus, not only was I thoroughly soaked a quarter of the way into the day, but all the water caused the lining of my hiking boots to disintegrate into tiny, painful shards. I limped across the finish line in the dark, thirteen and a half hours after I'd started, miserable, soggy and alone.
Disliking adversity, I avoided the Saunter for the next decade. But then my friend Marci got excited about it. I do like walking, I do like New York adventures and I do like Marci, so I gave it another shot. Turns out that walking it with friends on a nice day and with some thoughtful preparation can make the Great Saunter a terrific experience. We've done it most years since, and, more important for you, we've taken notes about what works. Last year, the notes were so effective, Tony and I finished easily with no pain and felt fine the next day--a first for us and the Saunter. In contrast, I cannot run a mile.
Herewith is a decade of wisdom on how to prep for and enjoy the Great Saunter.
Before the Saunter
* Save the date. Right this minute, click over to your calendar and block off the first Saturday in May from 7a to 8p. (Do not make evening plans, or you'll be tempted to drop out early in order to go home to rest and shower.) Congratulations: You've just done 70% of the work required to Make this Your Year.
* Do some training. I'm sure you can find elaborate training plans online. If that's your jam, go for it. Or do what we do: from January through April, schedule training walks of one to four hours approximately once a week. On some weeks, do two training walks; on some weeks, do none.
Start with hour-long walks and work up to four-hour walks. Do three or four of those long walks by the end of April. Boom, when the first weekend in May rolls around, you're good to go. As a friend says, if you can walk twelve miles, you can do it two more times in the same day.
Incidentally, if you live in NYC, you can do some of your training along the Saunter route: It starts near South Street Seaport and heads clockwise around the island. These days, I tend to do a lot of walks around the outer perimeter of Prospect Park and stretches of the Brooklyn waterfront (much of which is similar to Manhattan's edge 20 years ago--i.e., not really accessible). If you're traveling during the spring, training walks are a good way to get acquainted with other cities.
* Train at a pace slightly faster than the Saunter. What with the crowds and the chatting and the bathroom breaks and the eating (see below), the Saunter tends to roll at a 20-minute mile. You can easily train at a 16- to 19-minute mile, which makes the Saunter feel like, well, a saunter. Last year, I used MapMyWalk's phone app to gauge our pace during walks. In previous years, I used Gmaps or a pedometer to gauge distance, kept an eye on my watch, and then did the math to determine the rate we were walking.
MapMyWalk is easier, and friends and family can see where you are along the route. That's especially fun on the day of the walk, when it's good boost to get a friendly text cheering you on ten hours into the day: "Looks like you're near Gracie Mansion. Wave to the mayor as you walk by!" (Your family might suggest flipping off the mayor, which can be energizing, too.) As an added bonus, if you have compatriots joining you after the start of the walk, they can find you on the app map, eliminating the distracting and often frustrating attempts to text your way to a meeting point.
* Test the gear you're going to use. I understand from real atheletes that everyone knows you're supposed to train with the equipment you plan to use on game day. Same goes here. Because you start training when the weather is quite different from a May morning, it can be hard to try out the proper lightweight clothes. But do make sure you test your sneakers and a bag that's comfortable when it's loaded up. Tony carries a Camelbak pack. I use a lumbar pack (which is a fancy name for big fanny pack). Marci uses a small messenger bag. (See below for detailed notes on clothing and shoes.)
* Sign up online. Shorewalkers is a lovely group--with perhaps the worst online signup process on the entire Internet. Still, if you sign up ahead, they'll snail mail you your number and the route map. The walk now draws about a thousand people each year, so better to spend an annoying 30 minutes on their website at a convenient time than at 6:30a standing in the cold with 950 other people who are trying to register on the morning of the walk. (Technically, you don't need to register at all, but I do like supporting this small organization. Also, having a number makes it easier for other walkers to spot you and chat; it's a diverse, friendly crowd, and this can be a real benefit. Plus, you can get a certificate when you finish, though I usually blow that off to go get a milkshake instead.)
Registration for the 2014 walk is not yet live, but set yourself a calendar reminder to check their website in a month or two.
On the Day of the Saunter (and Some Training Days)
* Meet up with friends, preferably chatty friends. The Saunter takes twelve or thirteen hours. They go by much, much faster if you have good company. Marci, Tony and I now have a semi-regular crew of about a dozen friendly people who make some part of the walk most years (you can, of course, walk segments without doing the whole thing--it's legal but not as satisfying). We tend to start the day together but then walk in pairs or triads and reconfigure ourselves as we loosely regroup at bathrooms, bandaid breaks and lunch. Over the course of the day, you get in a lot of interesting conversations, and you get to try everyone's snacks.
It's not possible to walk as a pack in Manhattan, and it's a ton of work to keep track of everyone at each minor stop, so we don't do those things.
* Wear sneakers. Hiking boots are not only overkill for a mostly flat, paved walk, they're also too heavy for a 32-mile day.
* Wear a white t-shirt. The temperature in early May varies a lot, and if it's sunny and warm, you're in for a harder day. Plan accordingly. Most of my t-shirts are black, but if it's hot out, the dark fabric makes a big (bad) difference. If you run warm, wear a light-colored top.
* Bring a long-sleeve top layer. It can be cold in the morning and especially in the last hour or two.
* Running tights that hit just above or below your knee are generally right for early May temperatures. If you don't do running tights, wear a layer of bicycle shorts or long boxer briefs or something similar. Without a body skimming lower layer, chafing is an issue. A really unpleasant one.
* Wear a hat. You're an adult. You understand this principle.
* Carry your water bottle in your hand. Dehydration is one of the things that will tire you out most quickly and thoroughly. To help you keep drinking, hold onto your water bottle--don't stow it where you can't reach it.
* Take advil every four hours. It can only help.
* Things to bring on the day of (and on your longer training walks):
Things to leave at home on the day of:
A final tip: If it rains, we stay home and catch up on TV. The Saunter will always--always!--happen again next year.
PS. I do want to emphasize that fitness-wise, if I can do this, anyone can. I'm intimidated by gyms. I hate running, and I'm not a fan of biking, either. Swimming involves getting wet, which, no. I get completely exhausted and out of breath standing still, watching the marathon stream by my apartment every year. But I can do enough mild training to walk 32 miles comfortably. You can, too.
All photos taken by Marci Alboher on the 2013 Saunter. We don't know what the hell that last picture is of, which is part of the joy of this event.
(This post was originally published on the Huffington Post, September 24, 2013.)
Last month, the hashtag #SolidarityIsForWhiteWomen erupted on Twitter. Started by Mikki Kendall, it immediately became a channel for women of color to call out how implicit racial bias, double standards for women of different races and overt racism are all baked into mainstream white feminism. If you've been following feminism for the past 150 years, you probably weren't surprised by the range of grievances. But if you're a white feminist and you were surprised or you felt defensive or you think you're not part of the problem, then now is the time to woman up, rethink your own role and help reshape feminism.
While there are many reasons white feminists have to do this work, Kendall's hashtag highlighted an important one: we cannot credibly or successfully seek societal change when we ourselves create the same injustices we rail against. In other words, the problems we face as women are often the problems we create as white people.
Since #SolidarityIsForWhiteWomen trended, I have seen excellent pieces by women of color, many suggesting steps white women can take to be better allies. Their insights are leading us toward a more conscious feminism. White women, however, need to take responsibility for educating ourselves, too. So, here are five steps white feminists--myself included--can take to check ourselves, connect more genuinely with women of color and improve feminist outcomes for people of all races. As a test of the need for these actions, consider whether you'd want the men in your life to try each step in confronting their own sexism.
1. Recognize that even when your good intentions are truly good, that's totally meaningless. This idea is hard to accept, because our culture suggests that we should feel like heroes just for wanting not to be racist. (Plus, it's maddening to be misunderstood.) I have gotten hung up on those two horns frequently. But what matters is your impact, not your intentions, and you don't get credit for thinking good thoughts.
Try this on for size: when you accidentally step on somebody else's foot, you do not make your good intentions the focus of the episode. Instead, you check to make sure the other person is OK, you apologize, and you watch where you're going. You don't get annoyed with the person you stepped on because you caused her pain or declare that she is too sensitive or defend yourself by explaining that you meant to step to the left of her foot. When you crush another person's toes, as Franchesca Ramsey has pointed out, everyone recognizes that your impact, not your intention, is what's important.
Why isn't that the standard for saying something when you didn't intend to cause harm? For white women interacting with women of color, we may reflexively, unwittingly assume our experience -- and therefore our intentions -- are (or should be) primary. I'd argue that's rooted in our internalizing cultural messages. But whatever the root, we have to get wise if we expect women of color to take us seriously.
So, when somebody points out that you've said or done something racist, perhaps something that hurt them personally, the game-changing response is first to understand that your intentions are not the centerpiece of the interaction. In other words: it's not about you, which can be a genuinely hard to see. Once you let your intentions fall away, you can focus on what the other person is saying (recommended: assume she has a very valid point and try to understand where you went wrong). It changes no games to insist that you meant to be perfectly graceful.
2. If you feel defensive when talking about race with a woman of color or reading about race in a piece written by a woman of color, assume the other person is saying something especially true. That is: use your defensiveness as a Bat Signal, alerting you to your own biases. Sure, yes, of course, the other person may have said something insensitive or unreasonable. But if you want to change the dynamics of the world (reminder: you're a feminist, so you do), assume your discomfort is telling you something about you, not about the other person. Then use those moments to listen more carefully.
Here's a personal example. Writing on The Toast in July, Jessie-Lane Metz, a black woman, called out supposed white allies for a number of harmful behaviors, including writing about episodes in which a white author describes racism they have perpetrated or witnessed:
My first critique is that this [writing] re-centres whiteness. When a person of colour speaks to their own experiences of racism, they are speaking to a collective pain, and speaking truth to power. When a person with white skin privilege gives an anecdote about racism, whether their own or someone else's, they are exposing more racialized people to this discrimination, and reasserting their own privilege. The narrative is no longer about Black victims of racist crimes and a deeply flawed justice system, it is about white feelings about Black bodies and their experiences. This is not helpful to intersectional practice, as it implies that only by making an oppression about the oppressor can power-holders work towards becoming allies. Secondly, it disregards the feelings of Black people by exposing them to further racism in an effort to work on white privilege. I do not consent to being confronted with racism in the hopes that white folks can maybe start to exorcise their own internalized issues. Allies need to do this work on their own.
The first time I read Metz's piece, I shifted in my chair a few times, recognizing things I'd done (writing about my own racism -- which I won't link to here, out of respect for Metz's point) and trying to justify those actions (I think I've helped other white people become more aware of their privilege, which is good, right?). I felt distinctly defensive. Which made me want to dismiss what she was saying. Which made me realize I should leave the tab open and re-read the post when I could do so with a focus on her experience of white allies, not mine. (Obviously, I'm made my story of reading Metz central here; I realize there's some irony and risk in that.)
I will admit that like many would-be allies, I'd like to be recognized for my open-mindedness -- however minimal it may be (in this case, I left a tab open, hello) -- when I feel put off. But getting rewarded is seriously, seriously not the goal, and you have to play through that desire for a cookie. Identifying a moment when you're shutting down, and you instead shift to listening harder, with deeper empathy, and likely with quiet self-reflection -- that's the goal.
3. Look for ways that you are racist, rather than ways to prove you're not. There are two key ideas here. First, you can't change behaviors you're not aware of, and if you're constantly trying to assure yourself you're not racist, you're going to miss the ways you are. Second, once you've accepted that you are, in fact, racist some of the time, it's a lot easier to drop the barrier of good intentions, let go of the defensiveness and take responsibility for your actions.
For most of us, identifying our own racism dredges up shame, which is a seriously unpleasant feeling and something we want to avoid. Plus which, assuming you're not cavorting around your neighborhood in a white hood and sheet, it may not be that obvious to you that you are racist. But the thing is: you can't avoid it. Everyone is born with the potential for racial bias and most children acquire it very early in life, so even if you do not identify as a racist, racism is baked into you. And then it's reinforced by our culture. No point in feeling guilty because you're a human and the product of a racist society. But, by all means, feel bad about yourself if you choose not to identify and work against your racial bias.
As I said earlier, you're going to have a hard time challenging your own bias if you're not even aware of it. So, seek out ideas and people that help you see yourself more clearly. If you need a place to start, diversify your media -- consume articles, books, podcasts, radio, video and TV shows made by people of color -- and when white folks are portrayed critically, find ways to identify with them rather than assume that you're different than they are. The point here isn't to take kick off a miasma of self-flagellation, but rather to gain perspective on yourself.
For example, I was recently reading, Our Black Year: One Family's Quest to Buy Black in America's Racially Divided Economy. In it, Maggie Anderson, a black corporate strategy consultant, talks about the experience she and her husband, a black financial adviser, often have at dinner parties and office gatherings, as white people approach them:
People flock to us, asking about our backgrounds, where we live, even why my hair is "different" from most African-American women's hair. (White folks never say "not kinky" or "more Black." They say, "Wow, your hair is so thin!")
At some point, they tell us every detail about the lovely Black couple who attends their church or lives in their neighborhood. They want to introduce us. The logic goes something like this: They're nice Black people. The Andersons are nice Black people. Nice people will like each other. And if both husbands play basketball, as I'm sure they must, we're working up the Black friendship of a lifetime.
As I read, my first impulse was to think, "I've never mentioned (or touched) a black person's hair! Thank god I'm not one of those white people!" But when I let myself dwell for a minute in the scene Anderson describes, it's clear I've done several of the things she rightly calls "clueless." Centering my own behavior again: I've been awkwardly too friendly when introduced to black folks at parties (see above on good intentions). When I meet people, I almost always ask where they live, without considering that my questions might come off as an investigation rather than as a way to connect (Ibid). I have definitely considered introducing black folks in the tech sector just because they're both black (this, despite the fact that I really hate being introduced to women in business when the only things we obviously have in common are that we're both women, and we both work).
These actions aren't horribly destructive and virulently racist. But don't be fooled by subtlety: small acts of bias make it harder to build genuine relationships. And maintaining personal distance helps white feminists stay disconnected from the concerns of people of color. So, accept that you'll likely feel uncomfortable and embarrassed, but consider that you are like the other white folks that people of color describe.
4. Listen to people of color, even if you don't know many. A common suggestion for white people who want to get a clue is to simply listen. Which is a critical step, and it's especially important in your direct interactions with people of color. But what if none of your best friends are black and you don't work with many people of color either? As I mentioned earlier, you can make sure you're taking in media created by people of color. You can also do a ton of thoughtful listening on Twitter -- a medium that gives you legitimate access to the thoughts and conversations of people you may not know.
I've written before about how you can -- and should -- follow people of color in a respectful way on Twitter. You can also seek out some of the stellar women mentioned in the recent campaign kicked off by Feminista Jones that identified #SmartBlackWomenOfTwitter, #SmartLatinaWomenofTwitter, #SmartAAPIWomenOfTwitter, etc. If you're already overloaded on Twitter, try a swap: for every new woman of color you follow, unfollow a white guy. You might be surprised by the effect such a simple step can have on your perspective.
5. Use your feminist powers to identify instances when people of color are under-represented or misrepresented, and speak out about it. You're already in the habit of noticing when lists and groups include few or no women. Tweak your internal algorithm to notice when people of color are missing, too. Then say something.
Women of color don't need us to speak for them, and there are times when standing quietly in solidarity is important. But very often, speaking up is important -- not only because it may influence others, but also because it will likely influence you. As a recent Guardianpiece noted: "when you're confronted by prejudice and you don't object to it, your own attitudes shift in a more prejudiced direction, to maintain consistency between your behaviour and your beliefs."
Of course, there is a chance that raising an issue as a white person may help other white people see it more clearly or see it in the first place. (Indeed, if you've read this far, ask yourself: "Would I have stayed with the piece if it had been written by a woman of color -- or might I have dismissed it early on as 'too angry'?") And you may wonder if inserting yourself is really progress. Instead, wonder this: If white feminists don't strive to see what women of color see and don't consider those perspectives as central as our own, are we truly interested in challenging injustice at all?
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A note on comments: I’m interested in a good conversation on this topic, and I welcome opinionated comments on this post. Seeing, however, as the internet tends to draw vile comments on sex and race, I should mention that I will edit or delete hateful and phobic comments, personal attacks on me or other commenters, off-topic threads (including assholic comments on this comments policy) and things that strike me as trolling. If you dislike that approach, comment on any of the 80 billion other sites that welcome diversity of obnoxiousnes.
I’ve hosted many high-profile business conferences, and my events now have more really good speakers who are women and/or people of color than most such gatherings. It wasn’t always that way. I work primarily on events that are affiliated with the tech sector, and although the community prides itself on being meritocratic, conference rosters—including some of the events I’ve worked on in the past—tend to be surprisingly homogenous. Conference hosts like to say that that’s because most of the prominent people they can think of to invite and most of the people who apply to speak are white men. Both of those things are perfectly true, but they’ll define your event only if you’re willing to take the easy path and accept conventional, non-disruptive thinking about how to find speakers. Indeed, I’ve found a number of other methods that work well to find stellar speakers from under-represented groups of all kinds. Although I’m focusing here on conference speaker selection, most of these ideas apply to hiring and other business decisions, too, and will work with under-represented groups of all kinds.
Other conference hosts should care about over-representing particular groups for several reasons. 1) Many people will find your event irrelevant or hard to distinguish if all of the speakers look the same to them. A slate with sharp speakers from different communities will draw attendees from different communities. 2) If your event is trying to promote innovation, you yourself should use forward-looking techniques to find speakers—and you will show yourself in the best light when you discover people who have terrific ideas but who are not already stale on the conference circuit. 3) If you believe that the tech sector is meritocratic and that you have benefited from this condition, the righteous thing to do is to perpetuate the meritocracy.
What I’m concerned with isn’t choosing speakers because they’re from under-represented groups. Instead, I care about finding great candidates that you’ll likely miss because people from those groups don’t show up when you use only the traditional systems for finding speakers. The approaches you use make all the difference.
Conference hosts usually use two primary methods to find speakers: 1) you brainstorm a list of prominent people you know or know of, and you invite those folks; 2) you hold a public call for speakers, and you sift through the applications to find the most promising candidates. Both of these methods generate some high-quality speakers. And it will feel like you’ve run a fair process—it was open, and it yielded good presentations—but thanks to deep cultural practices and hidden biases we all carry, white men will be overwhelmingly over-represented, not only among the speakers you brainstorm, but also among those who apply and the people you pick from that pool.
Think of it this way: for any conference, there are many more excellent speakers than there are available speaking slots—and there are a lot of women and people of color who would be great speakers for your event, but you won’t be as aware of them (they are less prominent), and they are unlikely to apply through your call for proposals (for reasons I’ll discuss in a minute). So when you use the two methods described above, which nearly all conference hosts do, you will have missed a very big swath of great candidates in your community, people who simply won’t appear in those processes. In other words, the traditional means for finding speakers are good at identifying white men who are solid speakers, but they are broken for finding other people, and they are thus not meritocratic overall. Because they naturally limit the pool of people you see, they also prevent you from discovering many of the truly best speakers you could have.
It’s a solvable problem. The Lean Startup Conference started in 2009 with a slate that was quite homogenous. Last year, when the conference founder, Eric Ries, and I started talking about my joining as co-host, I said I was willing to work together only if we changed the roster. Eric was totally on board. He was quite aware of the issue and had been writing for a while about hiring decisions in tech in particular. We thought that together, in an area we both cared about a lot and had written about publicly, we could do things differently. For both last year and this year’s Lean Startup Conference, we’ve created rosters comprising just over 50% women and people of color, the quality has remained high or has increased, and event attendance has at least quadrupled since the first year. (Our conference is now medium-sized: the 2013 event takes place in early December with more than 90 speakers and 1,600 attendees over three days.)
Improving the diversity of our speaker roster last year led to a few specific benefits. Because we wrote about what we were doing, we raised the profile of the conference in 2012 and 2013 among other people who care about how speakers are chosen. In both years, many new speaker applicants and a number of attendees from under-represented groups mentioned our efforts as a positive factor in their decisions to participate. And because our speakers include a lot of folks who aren’t regulars on the conference circuit, we’ve been able to distinguish our event from other entrepreneurship gatherings based partly on the lineup.
So I’m here to testify: the techniques below—many that buck conventional wisdom—will help you improve your event by finding better speakers in a more meritocratic manner. These approaches will often take more time and more persistence than you’re used to now, but you aren’t lazy, and you do want to have an impact in your industry. Here are the secrets to game-changing badassery as a conference host.
1. You don’t need to hire a woman or person of color to find women and people of color. You do need to commit to working on the problem. It’s commonly thought that if you want people from an under-represented group to join you, you need at least one person from that group on your team. Think again: there is nothing magical about having more estrogen than testosterone or a particular skin color or eyes of a certain shape that will help you locate speakers with those same physical attributes. You absolutely need to connect with the networks of those people, which I’ll talk about shortly, but you do not have be one.
Everyone in our culture carries hidden biases, including the people who are diminished by them. For instance, a widely circulated study last year found that male and female scientists alike were likely to discriminate significantly against female students. Scientists—people whose careers are based on supposed objectivity—are all subject to bias. You are, too, and so are the people you hire or who are on your selection committee, if you have one, even if they are all women and people of color. People from these groups may be more sensitive to the fact that your conference under-represents them, and you should seek them out as employees because diversity of thought creates the sharpest teams. But they are not inherently better at solving this particular problem. In fact, if white people and men do not take on these issues with equal interest as our colleagues, we will never see the ratios changed.
Eric and I are both white; we didn’t hire anyone to work on the Lean Startup program and find more great candidates who are people of color. We changed our outcomes by committing to finding processes that would lead us to people we weren’t previously aware of. To find speakers beyond the usual suspects, you, too, need to commit using different methods, many of which will take more time than those you’ve been using. You cannot expect people from under-represented groups to change the way they behave to meet your needs for familiarity or quickness. You have to change the way you behave. Happily, doing so pays off.
2. Do have quotas. Oh. My. God. Quotas??!? Are you kidding me? Everyone knows they ensure mediocrity and bias! Consider this: Your normal methods for finding speakers will generate good candidates more quickly than your new methods, so if you don’t designate slots for each stage, you will fill them all with people from the over-represented groups, and you will not have any slots to offer to the people from under-represented groups who appear later in the cycle. When you create quotas, you put in place both a measure and a mechanism for a successful, more meritocratic outcome.
If it makes you more comfortable, we can call these reverse quotas—i.e., limiting the number of people you accept up front as a way of compensating for known imbalances in the selection process and sequencing your decision making to ensure that it’s fairer. (You might also start by using quotas for just the widest part of the funnel; that is, you make sure that you simply consider a certain percentage of people from under-represented groups. The NFL calls this the Rooney Rule and uses it for hiring head coaches and senior football operations staff.)
For this year’s Lean Startup Conference, my goal was to have no more than 50% white male speakers—a number that reflects the business communities our attendees work in. We have just a few more speakers to add, but the final count looks like it’ll come in around 47% folks who are both white and male. I’m proud to shine a light on those guys—they’re deserving—and equally proud to have saved room for the terrific candidates from under-represented groups whom we found later.
MSNBC host Chris Hayes—whose show tackles political topics and has among its hundreds of guests annually only 43% white men (many fewer than the industry standard)—has a good take on quotas:
You have to say, “We give ourselves this rule,” and that’s going to force us to just be more resourceful. Because I genuinely don’t think there’s another way to do it. If you don’t do that then the inertia and the tide are so strong, unless you are committed as a priority to actively fight against it, you’re going to end up reproducing what everyone else does.
I know of no conference hosts who are in this game to reproduce what everyone else does. Use quotas, or reverse quotas, to help guide yourself toward a roster with amazing speakers whom you’ve drawn from a better pool of serious candidates.
3. Be transparent. If you assume that people are rational, it’s no surprise when women and people of color ignore your call for proposals (actually, what I and a whole lot of organizers find is that about 10% of your proposals will come from women, and maybe 2% from people of color). After all, if you’ve held your conference before, and you fielded a lot of white male speakers, people from under-represented groups can see that they’re not likely to be picked. If your conference is new, and you have no track record, they have no reason to think your event will be any different from others. And while you don’t need a diverse team to find diversity, as I explained earlier, you are sending a signal if your conference hosts and/or selection/advisory committee include no folks from the under-represented groups you’re trying to reach.
There’s a reasonably easy fix for this: write thoughtfully on the conference site and speaker application form. If your conference has a history of homogeneity, own up to what you’ve done in the past, talk about why you want to change it, and lay out the steps you’re taking to change your results. If your conference is new, demonstrate that there’s a problem in your sector, and then describe what you’re doing to ensure that you won’t over-represent particular groups (bonus: this is a good chance to differentiate yourself from your competitors). Then do the stuff you say you’re going to do.
Last year, when I joined Eric to co-host The Lean Startup Conference, the event was already two years old and had, as I said earlier, a clear bias toward white male speakers. To introduce a new era, we opened the 2012 call for proposals and asked people to nominate speakers, noting that we were particularly keen on finding women and people of color. That approach failed completely, drawing the normal ratios of 10% women and almost no people of color. In other words, we didn’t convince anyone that we were doing anything other than paying lip service to the idea of a meritocratic approach. We may even have made things worse by suggesting that we would favor under-represented groups, thus undermining our credibility (for the reasons cited above), could well have come across as insulting (nobody wants to be picked for anything other than their great ideas), and may have triggered stereotype threat (thus deterring people in under-represented groups from applying at all).
So we retrenched and tried to see things more from the perspective of people who were not already in our address books. That lead us to run another call, this time co-writing a longer post explaining why the event had had a lot of people on stage who looked like Eric, what we were doing differently now, and inviting people to apply especially if we did not already know them. In the second round, more than half of our applicants were women and nearly a quarter were from people of color. That wasn’t the only thing we did, as you’ll see below. But our honesty, we learned from applicants, was a key part of why many people submitted proposals who wouldn’t otherwise have done so.
(Btw, if you’re thinking, “See, you do need to have a woman on the team to get women to apply,” consider: Eric’s previous partner for the conference was a black man, and the roster then was almost completely white. I respect that partner a lot, and there are very good reasons the conference looked the way it did then. By the same token, I have worked on conferences that drew few women. There is no pixie dust generated by women or people of color that attracts more of us.)
4. When you seek speakers, either in writing or in discussion, the language you use matters a lot. If you say that you’re looking for “experts,” “best practices” or if you’re vague, you might as well instead say, “Men only need apply, and better if you’re a white guy.” Thanks to cultural pressure for women not to brag and to imposter syndrome, a well-documented phenomenon in which an accomplished person feels like a fraud, many potentially great candidates won’t consider themselves experts or qualified to speak at your conference.
I’m far from the only conference host to notice that men will often offer to speak publicly about things they know little about, while women tend to be hesitant to speak unless they’re certain that they’re the world’s primary expert on a topic. Back in 2009, I was at an Ignite event in San Francisco where a guy got up and said, “I learned last week about this thing called Lean Startup,” and then proceeded to give a weak talk on it. I’ve been working since 2008 with the man who created the Lean Startup movement, last year and this year co-hosting the conference he founded. If Eric weren’t available, and a group of total novices needed a talk on Lean Startup, I might feel qualified. I would not give a random Ignite presentation on it, because Eric is the world’s primary expert, not me.
Happily, there’s an easy way to tear down this barrier: simply say that you’re seeking people who have “advice or expertise to share.” You can go farther and clarify with a phrase like, “advice or expertise to share that other people can learn from” or “advice or expertise to share on how to repair any kind of toilet”—or on whatever the focus of your event is. Nearly everyone has advice, and many people consider themselves to have expertise. (I would give an Ignite presentation any time offering advice on how you can apply Lean Startup thinking in young media companies, because I have scads of personal experience with that challenge.) Tap those veins to good effect.
5. Do blind reviews where you can, but don’t stop there. The study I mentioned above is not the only one to find that in reviewing resumes and other work, people often discriminate against women and applicants with racially or ethnically distinct names. Conversely, when people review work without any clues about the sex or race of a candidate, they’re more likely to rate women and people of color more favorably. So, yes, if you have a call for proposals, you will automatically make your process more meritocratic if you ensure you have a way to review the ideas without knowing the applicants’ names. Set that up and do it.
But assessing speakers, like assessing job applicants, doesn’t end with written materials. You cannot rely on blind review alone, as you will eventually wind up watching video, talking on the phone, or meeting for an interview to continue your decision-making process.
For conference hosts, the first thing you’ll hit is likely to be video, as that’s increasingly required in applications. This is for good reason: bad writers can be great speakers, and decent writing can be submitted by a PR agent. Video can make a huge difference in helping you figure out who is or could be a terrific presenter. But it can make the playing field far steeper for people who are new speakers, and who, because the conventional processes don’t get them into the pipeline in the first place, are more likely to be women and people of color. So first, rather than ask people to submit video of themselves speaking at another event (as I used to do), require that everyone create a very short video specifically for applying to your event. This not only helps level the playing field, but it also weeds out PR agents, because the candidates cannot apply without being part of the process. Second, know that once you see the videos, your biases will kick in, and you’ll have to compensate with additional tactics. The fact that you’ve just outmaneuvered the PR flacks will give you extra energy for this work.
6. Ask groups to help spread the word about your call for proposals. You’ve announced your call for proposals, it’s transparent, and it uses inviting language. If the only people who know about it are people you already know, it may well draw very few new candidates. This is why, as I suggested earlier, you have to build alliances with people in other networks. You can—and should—reach out to groups like Women 2.0 and NewME Accelerator (or the equivalents in your sector), and see if they’ll tweet a link to your call for proposals or run it on their blog or newsletter. But you have to play the long game, too. Look for leaders in those networks and develop relationships with them, occasionally inviting them for coffee so you can learn what they’re working on and see if you can offer support over time.
Most of you know this already, but it bears emphasis: Building a variety of acquaintances in your sector is a basic business skill, and a crucial one for conference hosts.
7. Ask individuals to help find new speakers. Beyond your call for proposals, you’ll talk to a number of individuals who want to suggest speakers. Like you, most of these people will be most aware of white men—both among people they know and those they don’t—who could fit your needs. But if you ask them for help in identifying strong candidates from under-represented groups, these individuals often realize they have additional people to recommend. If your event includes panels, you can institutionalize this practice by requesting or requiring that panel organizers include at least one woman and one person of color in the group.
I’ve been holding these conversations regularly for more than five years, particularly with leaders, investors or otherwise influential and well-connected folks. At first, I felt awkward bringing up the fact that my conferences were trying to create something different. But over time, the conversations became much easier, and I’ve very rarely met silence or resistance. I just state matter of factly what we’re looking for, and people almost always say, “Of course! Good idea.” And then they come back later with at least one good recommendation, or they encourage a different employee to apply, and they ask me to look out for that proposal. I have once cancelled a panel, because the moderator insisted he didn’t know or couldn’t find any women. Given that dozens of other moderators had been able to find very strong panelists from under-represented groups, his inability or unwillingness to do so was a strong signal that he wasn’t of the caliber we needed for that conference. (I have once refused to participate in a panel that didn’t include any people of color.)You will not only draw in other people, but you’ll also get the added benefit of becoming more comfortable bringing up potentially tricky topics.
8. Seek out individual people from under-represented groups in your sector and brainstorm talk ideas with them. After you announce your conference, whether you have a call for proposals or not, you’ll almost certainly get a steady stream of emails from white men suggesting themselves as speakers. While many of them will be good candidates, you will not get a commensurate stream from awesome women and people of color, who may not see themselves as part of your community or who don’t know that they have advice relevant to your community or who are not in the habit of recommending themselves for public speaking roles.
The good news is that taking the time to talk individually with people from your under-represented groups and brainstorming talk possibilities together unearths very good ideas. I’ve found the rate is high, and about three-quarters of them turn out to be solid prospects. Not gonna pretend: this process is time-consuming. It requires finding people, some of whom you already know, some of whom you don’t (for instance, you have to attend other conferences, keep an eye on your industry press for names you don’t know, ask around, and so forth); reaching out to explain why you want to schedule a call or coffee; holding the conversation; and then possibly following up. It’s another play in the long game, but it has very high return, as those people not only become speakers, but also help spread the word about your event.
Bonus suggestion: Offer speaker training. This year, in The Lean Startup Conference call for proposals, we emphasized that we were looking for people we didn’t already know, including first-time speakers. To help encourage people not already on the conference circuit, we offered speaker training. We’re still in the throes of this training, and I don’t yet have advice on how to do it well. But I do know that a significant number of people mentioned in their proposals that the offer had motivated them to apply. Nearly all of those people were women. (Interestingly, the people who have participated in the training sessions we’ve had so far have been a very mixed group, and many of our most accomplished speakers have tuned in.)
Oh, and also: have a published code of conduct, talk about why it’s important and what else you’re doing to create a lively learning atmosphere for everyone who attends, speakers included. A lot of conferences have reputations for their intense party scenes. While that might be fun, people from under-represented groups may not feel included in that kind of socializing, and many women in particular may not feel safe in a crowded room with free-flowing alcohol and a majority of men. If you’ve put together your conference in order to help people learn, rather than to replicate Tailhook, think about the conditions you’ll need to foster to make learning really happen. Then do those things, and talk about them, and let people tell you how awesome you are for focusing on them. Potential speakers will take note.
At this point, I’m beginning to feel like one of the world’s experts on using more meritocratic processes to discover great speaking candidates you wouldn’t otherwise have found. Indeed, conference organizers, take note: I’m willing to speak on the topic.
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A shorter version of this piece was published on Pando Daily.
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A note on comments: I’m interested in a good conversation on this topic, and I welcome opinionated comments on this post. Seeing, however, as the internet tends to draw vile comments on sex and race, I should mention that I will edit or delete hateful and phobic comments, personal attacks on me or other commenters, off-topic threads (including assholic comments on this comments policy) and things that strike me as trolling. If you dislike that approach, comment on any of the 80 billion other sites that welcome diversity of obnoxiousnes.
Update 9/16: Friends have adopted Mitch! He's in a terrific household, and he's a perfect dog for them. I love a happy ending.
Original post: In NYC, small-breed puppies don't stay in foster care long. Most live happily in cramped apartments, and you can keep them in buildings that have a size limit for pets. So I was surprised today to come across the Foster Dogs NYC listing for Mitch, a sweet, five-month-old mini-Schnauzer mix.
Personally, I like big dogs (60 pounds and up), but I figured a little guy would be easy to take care of for a few days, so I offered to take him in. The couple that's had him for the past few days was sad to let him go, because he's really a love. But their Yorkie was staging a loud, ongoing protest against having another dog in the apt, and nobody, dog or human, could live with that.
Here's what we know about Mitch:
* He's 10-ish pounds, and he appears to be about five months, so he'll probably grow to 15 or 20 pounds total.
* He's wire-haired and thus will not be a shedding nightmare.
* He's neutered and up to date on his shots. Though he seems generally quite healthy, he has a bit of a cough; the previous fosters didn't think it sounded like kennel cough, and he's not on meds for it.
* The previous fosters report that he's house-broken, both in that he'll wait to go outside, or he'll use wee-wee pads inside. (Being a big-dog person, I have never used these floor diapers before, and I was kind of stunned to see that they work.)
* He's ridiculously trusting and sweet. When I went to get him, I brought treats to win him over. Totally unnecessary. He just got in my lap immediately, and he seems willing to let me touch him all over. When I started writing this, he snuggled up next to me on the sofa (an excellent laptop dog). Then he moved to the floor and cozied up on my foot. When he's awake, he doesn't make a ton of eye contact, but that appears to be pure puppy distraction. He has no abuse behaviors I've seen yet, and his tail is exuberant.
* The previous fosters thought he was brought to NYC from California by a rescue effort last week. They said he'd been with other dogs in California, and he seems totally dog friendly. Apparently, he loved their Yorkie; it just wasn't requited. [Tangent: While I can understand that people sometimes abandon dogs in NYC parks, I think it's gravely misguided to import dogs on the theory that there are a lot of people here. There are also tens of thousands of dogs that need homes already in the five boroughs. Once we run out of those, we can start flying in dogs from all over.]
* After picking Mitch up, I brought him to meet some friends. They have a cat, and she told him right off that she was going to be boss. He did just what you'd want: he backed away, and then kept a respectful eye on her. He did bark at her a couple of times after that, but he doesn't seem like a big barker generally, and he'll quiet down if you distract him. The previous fosters say they hadn't heard him bark at all.
* I'm not sure yet how he is with kids. He's at a chewing age, and he'll nibble on your arm, which wouldn't be cute with young children but should be readily trainable. I'm going to work on that while I have him.
* The previous fosters said they left him for up to four hours in their kitchen, and they'd come home to find him asleep.
* He let me put him in the carrying crate twice, and he was fine riding in my car.
* He's super-easy to walk on a harness. I'll holler if I can figure out any training he's had.
* He knows his name, but nobody will be surprised if you change it.
* His ears and tail are adorable. Maybe he's a Schnauzer/Muppet mix?
He's delightful, but he's about a tenth the size of my next forever dog. So if you're interested in fosterting to try him or out or simply adopting, shoot me a note (sarah dot milstein at gmail). I assume that a final adoption will have to go through Dimitra, who placed Mitch with the previous fosters, but we can work out those details when we get there. As I said earlier: small, young, sweetheart--he won't be available long. Act now!