Writing a thread on onboarding here, because I don't want to write it in the other place.

Context:
Good engineer onboarding *is* DEI. Teams that have great onboarding, tend to be more diverse and inclusive. Teams that have poor onboarding, tend to be more homogeneous and less diverse.

That's because poor onboarding makes life harder for junior employees and remote employees. Underrepresented groups benefit disproportionately from remote work options. Junior employees are a more diverse group.

Poor onboarding leads to more "beginner questions" for longer. Underrepresented groups experience higher social threat. So if 3 employees start working at Tech Corp on the same day, and they are:

* A white man
* A white woman
* A Black man

And they all have the same beginner questions 6 months after their start date, then the Black man and white woman are more likely to be perceived as "slow ramp up" people, and face career consequences as a result.

https://xkcd.com/385/

How it Works

xkcd

@mekkaokereke yup, and age is eventually a factor. At my age, 57, I have to be 5x better at what I do than someone in their 20s solely to avoid being seen as “too d to know this computer stuff.”

And I’m one of the whitest (Irish/luxembourgian) of white guys. Add being Black/Indigenous/POC and/or woman to that, and it gets *so* much worse.

@bynkii @mekkaokereke Old tech dudes unite! I'm 58, work as a tech product manager - my actual tech skills haven't been useful in quite some time. But my business domain knowledge, knowledge of development methodologies, problem solving ability and soft skills in mentoring, communication and process improvement have gotten nothing but better other the years. I don't fix problems or make new things any more. I make sure we're addressing the RIGHT things and empower other people to succeed.
@bynkii @mekkaokereke Also, there was some point when I realized that the age discrimination that I was finding was a l'il taste of what life must be like for folks in tech who aren't straight, white dudes. I had a backpack full of privilege for most of my career. It's a hard lesson that was VERY good for me to learn. I only wish I'd figured it out sooner.