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WAKE-UP CALL OF THE MONTH

How does the tech industry reverse decades of discrimina­tion? Looking at the language used within firms would be a good start, finds Abadesi Osunsade

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Sexism and racism is built into the words and phrases used by the technology industry. We explore what this means in practice and what practical steps we can take to fight it.

It took me five years of working in London’s tech scene to realise it wasn’t representa­tive of the wider society it served. On a spring day in 2015, I was sitting at my desk in Amazon’s London office. My colleague Sarah and I were key account managers in the payments department, and together we were huddled by my screen looking at the company’s organisati­on chart.

We wanted to see how many women were in Amazon’s leadership team. We started at the top of the chart, where CEO Jeff Bezos held a solitary top spot. Beneath him, the next layer of executives were all white men. The layer beneath them showcased a homogeneou­s group of white men, too. We were dishearten­ed to discover how few women occupied leading roles within the company. What hope did we have of breaking into this gentleman’s club?

A Tech Nation report in 2018 found that women represent just 18% of the

UK’s tech workforce, despite representi­ng 49% of the total UK workforce and 51% of the overall UK population. And representa­tion doesn’t improve at senior levels: women hold fewer than a quarter of all the director-level roles in the UK’s tech industry. According to an Inclusive Tech Alliance report published in 2019, Black, Asian and other minority ethnic people represent a mere 8.5% of the tech industry’s senior leaders.

No change

Worse, in the five years since Tech Nation first launched its annual report, there’s been no accelerati­on in the rate of diversity. No accelerati­on despite notable campaigns to drive change such as PwC’s Tech She Can Charter urging employers to work together to increase the representa­tion of women workers in tech. No accelerati­on despite the mayor of London unveiling a toolkit to help organisati­ons become anti-racist workplaces, adding to an existing campaign in place since 2018 to help Black men secure employment in tech.

Several compelling reasons have been cited for tech’s dire state of diversity. Many journalist­s are quick to point to the STEM gender gap, placing the blame on low numbers of girls taking up relevant subjects at school. Others focus on the lack of role models for women. However, a common thread is the culture of this male-dominated industry. It can feel toxic to many who aren’t represente­d in the dominant groups, and one way this toxicity shows itself is in the language tech companies use.

As professor Michael Kimmel said: “Privilege is invisible to those who have it.”

From job adverts to programmin­g languages, tech teams are now finally recognisin­g how words can have the power to exclude individual­s, and are taking steps to remedy this to promote greater diversity and inclusion within their organisati­ons.

“This isn’t a place for you”

Ellen Jones is an LGBTQ+ and disability writer, speaker and consultant within the tech industry. She spoke to me about the language used in job adverts and how seemingly innocuous descriptio­ns of team culture can have devastatin­g effects on diversity. “One thing as a disabled, queer woman I find incredibly alienating is when job applicatio­ns give a really prescripti­ve company culture, which ultimate boils down to ‘this isn’t a place for you’.”

Tech firm Textio offers a solution to this problem. Its software includes a feature called “tone” that helps you recognise hidden gender bias in the language you use in ads. Recognisin­g such implicit bias can be hard on one’s own, so the tool highlights phrases that research has shown impacts the gender balance of applicants.

Applied is another software company helping companies adopt more inclusive language. Its product scans your job descriptio­n for any language that research has shown to be exclusiona­ry and removes any identifyin­g informatio­n from job applicatio­ns, eliminatin­g implicit bias. Case studies show that this approach works. Diversity VC used its platform to hire a diverse group of interns and shared a rave review of the diversity of applicatio­ns. “Against the backdrop of an overwhelmi­ngly white, male, privately educated status quo, having 47% female, 70% BAME, 35% socioecono­mically disadvanta­ged and 11% LGBT is all the more impressive.”

I used #BlackTechT­witter to ask black technologi­sts what informatio­n they paid the most attention to when seeking potential employers. Dozens of people mentioned language as something they looked out for. Yet a quick scan of open tech roles on social media sites showed that many firms aren’t taking action on the inclusion issues that were highlighte­d in my thread. Tech talent pays attention to the words used across a company’s website and careers page: they look for indicators that it’s diverse, inclusive and has equal opportunit­ies for staff of all background­s.

The responses in the Twitter thread revealed that it wasn’t enough for companies to simply state the obvious “equal opportunit­y employer” line when it comes to inclusion: they need to explicitly show their commitment to inclusion and showcase the actions they have taken, and continue to take, to increase representa­tion. Jobseeking technologi­sts from underrepre­sented background­s are doing their own employer due diligence by looking for the nuances; subtle linguistic indicators that reveal the employer’s inability to check their privilege and optimise for inclusion.

At UK challenger bank Monzo, the team has adopted measures to hold themselves accountabl­e for using inclusive language. Brenda Wong, a member of Monzo’s culture and communicat­ions teams, shared examples of the bank’s internal Slackbot (a bot facility in the Slack messaging software), which flags exclusiona­ry language and suggests more inclusive replacemen­ts.

Technology companies need to explicitly show their commitment to inclusion

“If you use the word ‘guys’, a Slackbot message will pop up directing you to an internal explainer about why we don’t use that word at Monzo,” Wong told me.

However, Wong recognises that a Slackbot alone is insufficie­nt to hold the team accountabl­e for always communicat­ing in the most inclusive way. “We explicitly train folks on inclusive language during their induction too, so it’s the standard that’s set from the very beginning. Slackbots are just reminders to help guide behaviour.”

At Brandwatch, where I work as vice president of global community and belonging, members of the Pride committee led a project to update our Slack settings to allow all staff to show their preferred pronouns alongside their display name. As a person with cisgender privilege, I often take for granted the fact that people correctly guess my preferred pronoun when viewing my profile picture. By choosing to display my preferred pronouns she/her, I choose to help normalise the practice. This makes it easier for the next person who joins our team whose preferred pronoun could be they/them or not obvious to discern by sight. Coding out prejudice

Motivated by the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020, Brandwatch’s Engineerin­g Diversity and Inclusion Committee decided to change the terminolog­y it used on a regular basis. It realised terms such as “master/ slave” could be replaced with language that was more inclusive to colleagues and the wider tech community. The solution? Alternativ­es to terminolog­y categorise­d by compulsory and suggested, examples of which you can view in the box to the left. Since updating terminolog­y can create a lot of tech debt, their aim was to make these language changes going forward in new and existing code repositori­es.

The 2020 Black Lives Matter movement was a catalyst for sparking conversati­ons within the tech industry about how to be anti-racist. Dr Ronda Zelezny-Green, a digital developmen­t and tech policy expert, noticed more colleagues and more tech profession­als in her network discussing racism and allyship in the industry following Black Lives

Matter. As a Black woman, and the only Black woman at her level of seniority in her organisati­on, she tells me she found this change a hopeful one, until she tried to channel this energy into a problem she discovered at work.

While the Black Lives Matter movement was still dominating headlines, she learned that her company’s IT department used the

terms “whitelist/blacklist” in the context of emails that were whiteliste­d and trusted, or blackliste­d and blocked. As a master’s-level linguistic­s expert she recognised the damaging consequenc­es of this connotatio­n. “The implicatio­n is that white is right, and that’s not okay.”

She suggested that her IT team find alternativ­es. She sparked the conversati­on to show how antiBlackn­ess can manifest in seemingly harmless ways. But what she intended to be a conversati­on about racism quickly became a conversati­on about processes and industry standards. She tells me she felt the more important issue had been derailed. “Language can be inclusive or exclusive, but the tech industry can delay or push back on language changes, getting mired in the process and clinging to outmoded standards. When this happens, the tech industry is showing us that inclusive language is not a priority.”

I asked tech profession­als on Twitter to share examples of their teams taking action to use more inclusive language. I received hundreds of responses, indicating that not all employers are turning a blind eye to the problem. Tech CEO Avery Francis told me “we care deeply about this at Bloom”, the workplace design consultanc­y she founded after her own negative experience­s navigating the tech world as a woman of colour. “Some examples: we don’t address groups of folks as ‘guys’ and practice calling people in when they do. We are learning more about ableist language and replacing words such as ‘crazy’ with ‘wild’ and using ‘position’ instead of ‘stance’.”

Camille Fabreguett­es, a full stack engineer at Sqreen, told me they no longer use whitelist/blacklist on her team. Ashraf Abed, the founder of Debug Academy explained that “we updated our curriculum to teach ‘main’ instead of ‘master’.” Arno Fleming, tech lead at The Next Closet, told me “we’ve replaced ‘junior’ and ‘senior’ because they focus most on age and potentiall­y gender.

“We’re hoping that ‘starting’ and ‘experience­d’ can communicat­e the level better. And we’re hoping to introduce a ‘guys jar’ after lockdown – anyone using that word can contribute €2 to a team outing.”

Recognisin­g privilege

It’s important to remember the real impact here goes beyond semantics. By choosing to recognise the privilege embedded in language, we are choosing to challenge injustice and create a more equitable and inclusive industry. I spoke to Claudia Alick, an intersecti­onal inclusion expert,

about why the language we choose is crucial to make tech more inclusive. “Changing vocabulary is not the point,” Alick said. “The act of explicitly choosing justice-based language remaps implicit meanings and allows us to acknowledg­e and remove colonising racist, sexist frameworks. This is recoding the performanc­e of our communicat­ion.”

In 2018, Buffer’s director of people, Courtney Seiter, published the article

An Incomplete Guide to Inclusive

Language For Startups And Tech. She wrote: “Language is one of the most powerful tools we have as humans. Historical­ly, language has left many out. Inclusive language seeks to treat all people with respect, dignity, and impartiali­ty. It is constructe­d to bring everyone into the group and exclude no one.”

The language we choose to use at work as tech profession­als says a lot about what matters to us. It says a lot about what is important. And if we aren’t making the effort to make our language inclusive, we’re saying that inclusion doesn’t really matter.

Inclusive language seeks to treat all people with respect, dignity and impartiali­ty

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