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A recent Harvard study makes a powerful case for Black supervisors in the workplace. The research shows that when Black supervisors overs...
Harvard Study: How Black Supervisors Reduce Workplace Bias and Boost Fairness
Jun 10 -
3 minutes, 14 seconds
Why Black Supervisors Matter: A New Harvard Study
A recent Harvard study makes a powerful case for Black supervisors in the workplace. The research shows that when Black supervisors oversee hiring and evaluations, racial bias decreases. This leads to fairer treatment of Black workers and helps close the racial productivity gap.
The Problem: Bias Hurts Black Workers Every Day
Black professionals face many unfair challenges at work. Studies show that:
- Job applicants with Black-sounding names are less likely to get hired.
- Black employees are promoted less often than their peers.
- They experience more racial microaggressions.
These problems are baked into company culture. Researchers Anna Gifty Opoku-Agyeman and Emma Rackstraw wanted to find a practical solution.
The Study: Testing the Black Supervisor Effect
The researchers tested a simple idea: Does knowing a Black supervisor is watching change how people evaluate Black workers? They used an online study with nearly 3,000 participants. Most were white, had hiring experience, and were around 43 years old.
Participants reviewed four resumes and guessed each worker's performance. They were split into four groups:
- Those told a Black supervisor was watching
- Those told a white supervisor was watching
- Those told a supervisor (race unknown) was watching
- Those with no supervisor
What They Found
The results were clear. When participants knew a Black supervisor was overseeing them, they rated Black workers as more productive. In fact, Black candidates were guessed to answer 0.5 more questions correctly. This closed about 20% of the racial gap seen under white supervisors.
As Rackstraw explained: "It doesn't make the racial gap go away, but it makes progress."
Why This Happens: The Hawthorne Effect in Action
The study builds on the Hawthorne effect—the idea that people act differently when they know they are being watched. In this case, the presence of a Black supervisor made evaluators more careful and fair. They may have worried about appearing biased, or they may have assumed Black supervisors value fairness for Black workers.
Researchers are still exploring the "why" behind the results. But the key takeaway is clear: diverse leadership changes behavior.
How Companies Can Use These Findings
Workplace leaders can take immediate action to reduce bias. Here are practical tips based on the study:
1. Promote Black Employees to Leadership Roles
Having Black supervisors in hiring and promotion decisions helps disrupt bias. It sends a signal that fairness matters.
2. Use Calibration Processes
When managers meet to discuss performance ratings together, bias is reduced. Include Black leaders in these meetings when Black employees are being evaluated.
3. Check Who Shapes the Talent Pipeline
Ensure Black professionals are involved in decisions about who gets hired, promoted, and paid. This helps catch hidden bias.
What This Means for Black Job Seekers
Opoku-Agyeman offers direct advice for Black workers: "If you're Black, you should be keen on whether Black folks are in leadership and involved with shaping the hiring process."
She suggests using LinkedIn to research company leaders. Look for organizations where Black professionals hold decision-making roles. Without these safeguards, the job market is harder for Black workers.
Beyond Hiring: Daily Workplace Decisions
The study's insights apply to more than just hiring. They matter for everyday evaluations, promotions, and pay decisions. When Black workers are unfairly viewed as less productive, having Black supervisors in the room can correct those perceptions.
Rackstraw notes: "Our results apply to any setting where perceived productivity measures are used—especially when they disproportionately affect Black employees."
The Bottom Line
This Harvard study makes a powerful case for Black supervisors. It shows that diverse leadership isn't just a nice-to-have—it's a practical tool for reducing bias. Companies that want to build fairer workplaces should prioritize promoting Black professionals into roles where they can shape evaluations and hiring.
The research proves that small changes in who oversees the process can lead to big improvements in fairness. And that's good for everyone.
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