Rethinking Job Descriptions: Who Are You Really Excluding?

Many small and medium-sized organizations don’t have a dedicated human resources function. Even when they do, blind spots still exist.

Those blind spots don’t show up in obvious ways. They show up in job descriptions, job ads, and the quiet assumptions built into how we define “qualified.”

This is where hiring often goes off track, before a single interview happens.

A job description is not just an internal document. It becomes the blueprint for your job advertisement, your screening process, your interviews, your training, and your performance expectations.

If that foundation is unclear, everything built on top of it becomes harder, less consistent, and more likely to exclude capable people you never intended to leave out.

Why job descriptions matter more than most organizations realize

A strong job description:

But there is a deeper question most organizations don’t ask: How many capable people never apply in the first place because of how we write these documents?

Many job descriptions unintentionally narrow the pool of applicants through:

As a result, qualified people often remove themselves from consideration before they ever apply, not because they can’t do the job, but because the job description didn’t feel like it was written for them.

Unintentional Bias in Job Descriptions

Bias in job descriptions is rarely intentional.  It is usually the result of habit, inherited language, and assumptions that go unexamined.  But its impact is real: it quietly determines who applies, and who doesn’t.

Credential and experience assumptions

• Are we requiring a university degree when equivalent lived experience or practical skill may be sufficient?
• Are we inflating experience requirements (e.g., 5 years) for work that can realistically be learned in a much shorter time frame?

Language and bias in wording

Clarity and accessibility

• Would someone from a different background interpret this job description as open to them, or already closed off?
• Does the language describe the actual work, or does it reflect internal comfort zones and familiar hiring patterns?

The core check

Designing Job Ads for Real Humans (Not Just HR)

Job descriptions and job advertisements work best when they are written for clarity first, not formality.

The goal is not to sound impressive.  The goal is to be understood.

That starts with plain language, specific expectations, and removing unnecessary corporate or internal jargon.

Core principle

What strong job descriptions consistently do well

Effective job descriptions are not complicated, but they are intentional. They consistently:

• Clearly define what needs to be done in practical, real-world terms
• Become a reusable foundation for hiring, onboarding, and performance conversations
• Connect directly to recruiting, interviewing, selection, and training, rather than existing separately from them
• Evolve over time as the role, organization, and environment change
• Support ongoing performance conversations that are two-way, not one-directional evaluation
• Stay grounded in reality rather than idealized or inflated expectations

The shift that matters

Writing for Inclusion and Neurodiversity

Inclusion and neurodiversity are not separate considerations added at the end of a hiring process.  They are built into how the job is defined from the beginning.

When job descriptions are unclear, overloaded, or overly subjective, they don’t just create confusion, they actively filter people out who could otherwise succeed in the role.

Language matters more than most organizations realize

Clarity improves applicant quality

A more effective approach is to clearly separate:

• what is essential
• what is preferred
• and what can be learned on the job

Many capable candidates, especially those who are more cautious or detail-oriented, will not apply unless they meet every listed requirement.

This means organizations often lose strong applicants before the process even begins.

Structure should be visible, not assumed

Focus on outcomes, not personality fit

The most inclusive job descriptions describe what success looks like, not what the “right type of person” feels like.

When roles are defined by outcomes instead of personality traits, more people can see how they might succeed in the position in their own way.

Clarity doesn’t limit people; it removes unnecessary barriers.

The deeper point

An Example: Designing a Clear, Inclusive Job Description

This example is intended to show how clarity, structure, and inclusion come together in a practical way.

JOB TITLE

A job title should reflect the actual function of the role, not just organizational hierarchy or internal tradition.

The purpose of a title is simple: it should help someone immediately understand what the work is.

Avoid titles that are vague, inflated, or unclear, as they can create confusion about the real responsibilities of the role.

LINES OF AUTHORITY

Every role should have one clear direct reporting relationship for day-to-day work.  This reduces confusion, conflicting direction, and unnecessary pressure on the employee.

In more complex organizations, additional stakeholders may exist, but operational clarity still matters. If multiple people influence the role, responsibilities should be clearly defined so expectations do not conflict.

Clarity in reporting structure is not administrative, it is functional.

TASKS AND RESPONSIBILITIES

This section should describe what the person actually does in the role, in practical terms.

For example, an Assistant Store Manager role may include:

• Support daily operations by helping sales, service, office, and warehouse associates resolve day-to-day questions.
• Help ensure consistency in how the team delivers on core priorities such as customer service, productivity, profitability, cost management, and workplace respect.
• Maintain clear communication with other managers before, during, and after shifts to ensure alignment.
• Participate in scheduled meetings (daily, weekly, or team-based) to stay informed and contribute operational updates.
• Support onboarding and training of new associates using established processes.
• Participate in structured performance conversations focused on clarity, development, and improvement.

SKILLS AND WORKING APPROACHES

This section should describe how the work gets done, not personality traits or subjective qualities.

• Ability to prioritize and communicate clearly during busy or high-pressure periods
• Ability to make practical decisions using available information within required timeframes
• Problem-solving mindset focused on practical progress and removing barriers
• Willingness to learn systems, processes, and tools required for the role
• Ability to navigate internal systems for pricing, availability, and operational support
• Understanding that leadership is demonstrated through behaviour, consistency, and accountability
• Experience working with others in a respectful, structured team environment

COMPENSATION / WORK EXPECTATIONS / PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENT

This section should be transparent and specific so expectations are clear before hiring.

• Clearly define hourly or salary compensation
• Define expected hours, including evenings, weekends, or holidays if applicable
• Outline overtime expectations and approval process
• Explain how performance is measured and by whom
• Define any bonus or incentive structure and how it is calculated

TRAINING

Training should be designed before hiring begins, not created after the fact.

• Provide a structured onboarding plan with clear milestones
• Allow flexibility based on individual learning needs
• Treat training as an evolving system, not a fixed checklist
• Adjust training based on real feedback from new hires and managers

PROBATION

Probation should be a structured support period, not just an evaluation window.

• Define a clear probation period (commonly 90 days)
• Include scheduled check-ins (e.g., 30, 60, 90 days)
• Encourage early communication if confusion or challenges arise
• Use probation to improve clarity and support, not just assess performance

JOB DESCRIPTION AS PART OF THE HIRING PROCESS

The job description should be included in the job posting and used actively throughout hiring.

In final interviews, it should be reviewed directly with candidates to ensure shared understanding of expectations.

This reduces misalignment and ensures both the organization and the candidate are working from the same definition of success.

Psychological Safety Starts Here

Psychological safety in hiring does not begin during onboarding or after someone is hired.

It begins with the job description itself.  The way a job is written signals far more than responsibilities. It signals how an organization thinks about people.

It communicates whether:

• questions are welcome
• clarity is valued
• mistakes are treated as part of learning
• and whether people are expected to succeed—or simply prove they already belong

These signals are often subtle, but they are real.

Clarity is not just administrative, it is cultural

Clear job descriptions do more than define work. They shape:

• how confident applicants feel applying
• how accurately candidates self-assess fit
• how fairly hiring decisions are made
• and how aligned expectations are from day one

Clarity reduces friction before it ever becomes a performance issue.

What clarity does, and does not do

A well-written job description will not solve every hiring challenge.  But it will:

• reduce unnecessary confusion
• improve candidate quality and fit
• support more consistent hiring decisions
• widen access to capable people who might otherwise self-select out

The real goal

The goal is not to attract the most applicants.  The goal is to create conditions where the right applicants can see themselves clearly in the role and feel confident applying.

Including people who may not have applied under traditional job design is not a secondary outcome. It is a direct result of clarity.

Closing principle

When job descriptions are clear, hiring becomes more accurate, more inclusive, and more effective. When they are not, organizations don’t just lose applicants, they lose visibility into the people who could have done the job well.

Clarity in a job description will not solve every challenge in hiring. It changes the quality of the system that follows.

It helps candidates understand what the organization actually needs.  It helps hiring teams evaluate consistently and fairly. It reduces the gap between intention and interpretation on both sides of the process.

When that foundation is clear, better decisions become more likely at every stage that follows.

The real shift

The goal is not to attract the most applicants.

The goal is to design a process where more of the right people can recognize themselves in the role and feel confident enough to apply. Including people who may not have applied under traditional job design is not an added benefit. It is what clarity makes possible.

Final thought

When job descriptions are written with clarity, structure, and awareness of unintended exclusion, hiring becomes more accurate, not just more efficient. When they are not, organizations often make decisions based on a limited view of who was actually available.

Paul

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