If the Shoe Fits: Seeing the Forrest, but not the Trees
by Miki SaxonA Friday series exploring Startups and the people who make them go. Read all If the Shoe Fits posts here
Since Spring the media has been sharing stories and statistics about the rampant sexism, ageism and general bigotry in tech, its self-proclaimed “meritocracy” and the amazing male hyperopia (farsightedness) that seems almost incapable of recognizing bigotry in themselves or those close to them.
Y Combinator President Sam Altman and founder Paul Graham are a good example.
Last month Altman posted the importance of eliminating the gender bias in tech and Silicon Valley in particular, and that people need to stop pretending.
“One of the most insidious things happening in the debate is people claiming versions of ‘other industries may have problems with sexism, but our industry doesn’t.'”
He cited Y Combinator’s track record of accepting women founders into the incubator as proof that it isn’t sexist.
He did not, however, explain Graham’s statements in May that he doesn’t fund founders with strong accents or women who have/want kids.
Altman thinks HR can be a solution.
“Our sense is that many will benefit by doing it [human resources infrastructure] earlier. Traditionally, startups have thought of HR as a drag on moving fast and openness, but a well-running team is one of the best assets a company can ever have.”
However, the dozens of women who work for established companies with plenty of human resource infrastructure and have shared horrific stories on platforms from Whisper to Fortune are proof that rules don’t work.
The real solution in any company, from startup to Fortune 50 is a founder/CEO who backs a culture that is blind to gender, age and color and, most importantly, walks the talk, both professionally and personally.
This puts you, as a founder, in a position to truly change the working world.
Image credit: HikingArtist