Up to 75% of disabled people find that their condition has an impact when job-hunting, according to new research from the Recruitment Industry Disability Initiative (RIDI). Furthermore, 53% of respondents said that they first faced barriers as early as the application stage and a similar number (54%) reported hurdles at multiple stages of the recruitment process.
This represents a notable improvement since the RIDI survey in 2015, when 85% of jobseekers said that their disability had a negative impact when looking for work. In 2017 14% of those surveyed said their disability did not affect their job hunt at all – in 2015 this figure stood at just 3%.
RIDI, in conjunction with inclusive job board, Vercida, surveyed over 200 disabled jobseekers with a variety of physical and non-visible disabilities and long-term conditions. The survey was also shared by organisations that are trusted and respected by disabled job seekers including the Business Disability Forum (BDF) and PurpleSpace. Almost 23% of respondents considered themselves to have a mobility impairment, 8% had a visual impairment, 10% had a hearing impairment, 13% identified as having a learning disability and 28% said they had a mental health condition. Just under a third (30%) disclosed more than one condition.
Irrespective of disability, over half of respondents (53%) said the application stage was challenging. This represents little change since 2015, when 56% found the first hurdle problematic.
A candidate with a hearing impairment specified telephone interviews as being a particular challenge: “I just can’t do them. Recruiters constantly wanting to talk to me on the phone is annoying.”
While a respondent with a visual impairment noted: “Being unable to drive meant that I didn’t even get an interview in a number of cases.”
However, the research also threw up a number of examples of best practice, with those surveyed recounting positive recruitment experiences including: being offered a choice of contact method, extra time for assessments, fixed deadlines to plan applications, online interviews rather than face-to-face and an allocated parking space.
RIDI promotes the idea that small changes in recruitment processes can have a huge impact on inclusion and advises companies in ways in which they can drive change.
Commenting on the survey results, Kate Headley, Director of Consulting at diversity consultancy The Clear Company and spokesperson for RIDI said: “While it’s unacceptable that so many disabled jobseekers continue to find the recruitment processes challenging, these results confirm that we’re certainly moving in the right direction. Over the past two years I have witnessed a groundswell of awareness and understanding around disability in the workplace. This is in no small part thanks to the work that RIDI and our partners are doing in this area – but we still have further to go.”
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