Home » Blog » Talent Optimization » Seeing through perception bias: Get the infographic.
Talent Optimization
3 min read

Seeing through perception bias: Get the infographic.

Every organization has them: The top performer who seemingly emerges from nowhere. The highly touted recruit who interviewed well, but stumbles surprisingly during onboarding. Or the rising-star manager whose adjustments in a new role get rocky.

The perception gap manifests in many ways. People aren’t always who they seem, especially in the workplace, where behavioral drives can show up subtly. 

How HR can help

HR can help mitigate perception bias at their organization through the use of behavioral data. An individual’s behavioral pattern illuminates their strengths, their strongest drives, and their communication preferences, making you less reliant on preconceived notions of who they are or how they work.

Tools like PI’s Behavioral Assessment, targeted interview questions, and Development Guide assist in guarding against bias, and can enhance the entire employee experience.

Let’s walk through a handful of common forms of workplace perception bias.

The halo effect

What is it? When you form a positive overall impression of someone based on a single positive trait.

Example: A manager might assume an employee who is well-liked is also a high performer, overlooking potential shortcomings in their actual work.

The horns effect

What is it? When you form a negative overall impression of someone based on a single negative trait.

Example: An employee who is sometimes late to meetings might be perceived as lazy and unreliable in all aspects of their job.

Affinity bias (aka similarity-attraction bias)

What is it? Favoring individuals who share similar characteristics, interests, or backgrounds as oneself.

Example: A manager might build a stronger rapport with and offer more opportunities to an employee who went to the same university or shares the same hobbies.

Confirmation bias

What is it? Seeking out and interpreting information that confirms pre-existing beliefs while ignoring contradictory evidence.

Example: A manager who believes a certain team is underperforming might only notice and remember instances that support this belief, while overlooking their successes.

Attribution bias

What is it? How we explain the causes of behavior, often attributing others’ successes to external factors (luck) and failures to internal factors (lack of ability), while doing the opposite for ourselves.

Example: If a colleague misses a deadline, it might be attributed to their lack of organization, while if you miss a deadline, it might be blamed on an unmanageable workload.

Anchoring bias

What is it? When we become overly reliant on the first piece of information received (the “anchor”) when making decisions.

Example: In a salary negotiation, the initial salary offered can heavily influence the final agreed-upon amount, even if that initial offer was not based on objective market value.

Conformity bias (Groupthink)

What is it? Changing one’s own opinion to align with the majority view, even if one privately disagrees.

Example: During a team meeting, an employee might agree with a popular idea despite having reservations, to avoid going against the group.

Name bias

What is it? Having a preference for or against individuals based on their name, often linked to ethnic or gender stereotypes.

Example: Studies have shown that resumes with “white-sounding” names may receive more interview requests than those with names perceived as belonging to minority groups, even with identical qualifications.

The latest from our blog

Hiring

What Is Quality of Hire? Definition, Metrics, and How to Measure It

Quality of hire is the metric that picks up where the others leave off. It measures whether the...

Change Management

The importance of organizational change management

One of the secrets of today’s most agile organizations: Instead of spending time preparing for what they think...

Hiring

How to Build a Defensible Hiring Process in the AI Era

Is your hiring process legally defensible? Learn how job targeting helps HR cut through AI resume noise ,...

Leadership

What is an all-hands meeting: a complete guide

All-company meetings should cover relevant information while addressing core values and goals. But they also present opportunities for...

Leadership

19 essential HR KPIs and metrics for executives

Love them or hate them, KPIs have become an essential way for HR leaders to assess the effectiveness...

Employee Engagement

Solving Disengagement and Burnout: Why Wellness Programs Aren’t Enough

Employees don't burn out because they lack wellness resources. They burn out because their work is poorly designed:...

Hiring

AI in Recruiting: Benefits, Limitations, and How to Use It Effectively

AI in recruiting can improve efficiency, but has limits. Learn how to use AI responsibly while maintaining human...

Artificial Intelligence

AI filtering is making every candidate look the same. Here’s what cuts through.

AI-polished résumés mask real talent differences. How does job targeting and behavioral assessments help hiring teams find actual...

Uncategorized

How to identify a prospect’s social style

Understanding a prospect’s specific social style allows sales reps to better communicate. Key Takeaways What is the Social...

Back to top
Copy link