A step-by-step framework for inclusive recruitment covering job analysis, accessible job descriptions, diverse sourcing, structured interviews, bias reduction, assessment accommodations, and data tracking.
Inclusive Recruitment: A Complete Framework from Job Design to Offer
Why Inclusive Recruitment Matters
Traditional recruitment systematically excludes people with disabilities, neurodivergent candidates, and other underrepresented groups — not through malice, but through design. Vague job descriptions, unstructured interviews, inaccessible application systems, and unconscious bias at every stage create compound barriers.
The cost: Employers miss out on talent while disabled candidates lose access to opportunity. The fix requires redesigning the process, not just adding a diversity statement.
Step 1: Job Analysis and Design
Identify Essential Functions
The foundation of inclusive hiring is understanding what the job actually requires:
List every task the role involves
Classify each as essential (core to the role, cannot be redistributed) or marginal (useful but not fundamental)
For each essential function, identify the outcome required, not the method — "produce written reports" not "type 60 words per minute"
Write Inclusive Job Descriptions
Use clear, plain language (reading age 12–14)
List essential qualifications only — research shows women and minorities apply only when they meet 100% of requirements, while majority-group candidates apply at 60% (Hewlett Packard internal study)
Remove age-coded language ("digital native," "energetic," "recent graduate")
Remove unnecessary requirements ("must have a driving licence" when the role does not involve driving)
Include an explicit accommodation statement: "We welcome applications from people with disabilities and will provide reasonable accommodations throughout the recruitment process. Please contact [email] to discuss your needs."
Publish in accessible formats: screen-reader compatible, sufficient colour contrast, available in alternative formats on request
Step 2: Sourcing
Diversify Your Channels
Standard job boards reach standard candidates. To reach disabled and underrepresented candidates:
Supported employment providers: Local DES providers, VR agencies, Shaw Trust, Remploy
University disability services: Proactively engage with university disability and careers services
Professional networks: Disability:IN, Business Disability Forum, Purple Space ERG network
Neurodiversity programmes: Partner with autism employment organisations (NAS, Autistica, ASAN)
Refugee and immigrant organisations: Tent Partnership, Breaking Barriers, HIAS
Step 3: Accessible Application Process
Ensure your ATS (Applicant Tracking System) is WCAG 2.1 AA compliant — many are not
Offer alternative application methods: email, phone, video, in-person
Do not require handwriting, timed tests, or video introductions unless essential to the role
Test your application process with assistive technology users (screen readers, voice control)
Step 4: Structured Interviews
Unstructured interviews are among the worst predictors of job performance (Schmidt & Hunter, 1998). Structured interviews are both more predictive and more inclusive:
Pre-set questions asked of every candidate in the same order
Scoring rubric defining what constitutes a good, average, and poor answer
Diverse panel of interviewers (minimum 2)
Questions provided in advance (reduces anxiety for neurodivergent and disabled candidates without reducing assessment quality)
Accommodations offered proactively: extra time, breaks, written questions, sign language interpretation, accessible venue
Step 5: Assessment Accommodations
Accommodation
Who It Helps
Cost
Extra time (25–50%)
Dyslexia, ADHD, processing speed differences
$0
Questions in advance
Anxiety, autism, ADHD
$0
Breaks during assessment
Chronic pain, fatigue, anxiety
$0
Written instead of verbal
Deaf candidates, social anxiety
$0
Work trial instead of interview
Autism, social anxiety, learning disabilities
Low
Accessible venue
Wheelchair users, mobility impairments
Varies
Sign language interpreter
Deaf candidates
$100–$200/hour
Screen reader compatible tests
Blind/visually impaired candidates
Varies
Step 6: Decision-Making
Score candidates against the rubric, not against each other
Challenge any "gut feeling" rejections — they are bias in disguise
Record reasons for all decisions (legal requirement in many jurisdictions)
Monitor diversity data at each stage of the funnel
Step 7: Offer and Onboarding
Ask about accommodation needs at offer stage, not during interview
Begin accommodation setup before the start date
Assign a buddy or mentor for the first 90 days
Measuring Inclusive Recruitment
Track these metrics quarterly:
% of applicants who disclose a disability
Conversion rate at each stage (application → shortlist → interview → offer) by disability status
Time to accommodation setup
New hire retention at 6 and 12 months by disability status