Great Fundraising Organizations, by Alan Clayton. Book cover.

Fairness in recruitment gaining importance but still a way to go

Melanie May | 21 January 2022 | News

Two businesswoman talk over a small white table

Fairness in recruitment is becoming more important in the charity sector, with 88% now including the salary in job ads.

However, just little over half state a commitment to diversity, according to research by CharityJob.

The research includes responses from more than 300 UK charities and provides insights into how charities recruit paid staff and the steps they take to try to make their processes fair.

Advertisement

Great Fundraising Organizations, by Alan Clayton. Buy now.

According to How UK Charities Recruit, CVs are still by far the most common way to recruit among the charities that responded to the survey, with nearly seven in ten respondents (69%) requiring applicants to submit a CV. Over half of respondents asked for a cover letter (55%) or an application form (51%). Just under half of respondents asked for an equal opportunities or diversity monitoring form (46%).

Eight in ten respondents (83%) think the way they recruit is fairly (56%) or very (25%) effective. Fewer than one in ten felt their recruitment method was ineffective.

Those who used application forms were slightly less likely to find them effective overall (82% versus 84%), but more likely to find them very effective (30% versus 25%). Also, fewer reported them very ineffective (2.7% versus 4.5%).

Fairness in recruitment

The issue of fairness in recruitment is gaining in importance, but so far the picture is mixed. Of the charities surveyed:

Steve and Raya Wexler, co-founders of CharityJob said:

“Every day charities tell us how important it is to recruit fairly, so they get the best people to help them to help others. We wanted to run this research to find out how charities recruit so we can see how much further we have to go, and what else we can do to help. Fairness matters in all recruitment, but especially to charities who need to reflect the communities that they help.”

Loading

Mastodon