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Applied job board stats:
LSE Careers

LSE Careers seems to be a notable source of ethnic diversity, so a possible source of minority candidates

Gender

LSE Careers seems skewed towards women

Ethnicity

LSE Careers has a strong proportion of minority candidates, although this depends on location and sector.

A note on data

The data is based on over 50,000 applications, the majority of which are from the UK but also the USA, Australia, New Zealand, Switzerland and Singapore. We don't currently control for typical or average demographic response rates for specific jobs, or for the average review scores for the jobs that applicants applied to. Data for some job boards is based on a small sample, but we're working on it. 😉

About LSE Careers

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Top rated skills

Skill Avg score
written communication 3.0 / 5
communication 2.9 / 5
research 2.7 / 5
organisation 3.0 / 5
interest in cil & our work 2.8 / 5
attention to detail 3.2 / 5
cil values 3.1 / 5
growth mindset 3.0 / 5
presenting and communicating 2.9 / 5
motivation 2.7 / 5
passions & interests 3.2 / 5
flexibility and adaptability 3.0 / 5
operations 3.2 / 5
troubleshooting 3.2 / 5
stakeholder management 3.3 / 5
delivering results 3.0 / 5
strategy 2.7 / 5
creativity and innovation 3.0 / 5
initiative and drive 3.0 / 5
business analysis 2.6 / 5

Why diversity is important

A quick recap never hurts...

  • Poor diversity is a clue there may be hiring bias
  • Poor diversity dissauades talent from under-represented groups from joining you
  • There's evidence that diverse teams may perform better

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That means less bias, more accuracy, and less time wasted interviewing the wrong people.

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