In 1952, the Boston Symphony Orchestra realized they had a problem: they were hiring almost no women. To fix this, they started using a screen during auditions so the judges couldn't see the musicians. Surprisingly, the results were still skewed male. The judges could hear the "click" of high heels on the uncarpeted floor. Once they asked musicians to remove their shoes or installed carpets to muffle the sound, the number of women hired jumped by 25% to 46%.
This story is the classic example of blind hiring. It is the practice of removing personal details from the recruitment process so that candidates are judged only on their skills. In 2026, this is no longer just a nice idea—it is a vital strategy for tech teams that want to find the best engineers without letting unconscious bias get in the way.
Why blind hiring matters in tech
We like to think we are objective, but research shows otherwise. A famous Yale study found that even trained scientists preferred a male candidate over an identical female candidate, offering the man a starting salary that was about $4,000 higher.
Racial bias is just as persistent. Research from the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) found that resumes with "white-sounding" names received 50% more callbacks than those with "black-sounding" names, even when the qualifications were exactly the same. In technical hiring, where skills are highly testable, there is no reason to let these biases win.
A step-by-step guide to implementation
Building a bias-free process does not happen overnight. Here is how to do it in four clear steps.
Step 1: Fix your job descriptions
Bias starts with the words you use. Terms like "coding ninja" or "rockstar" can accidentally discourage women from applying. Use tools like Textio or DataPeople to scan your job ads for gendered language. Simple changes, like swapping "aggressive" for "growth-oriented," can increase your pool of underrepresented candidates by up to 50%.
Step 2: Anonymize applications
The goal here is to remove "noise" like names, photos, and even school names. Pedigree bias—the habit of favoring graduates from elite universities—often hides great talent from non-traditional backgrounds. Software like Pinpoint or blendoor can automatically redact this information in your applicant tracking system (ats).
Step 3: Use objective skills assessments
Instead of guessing if someone can code based on their resume, let them prove it. Platforms like Hackerearth allow you to send technical tests where the candidate's identity is completely masked. With PII (personally identifiable information) masking turned on, recruiters only see the candidate's score and their code, not their gender or ethnicity. Organizations using these validated tests often see a 20% boost in employee performance.
Step 4: conduct structured, blind interviews
Interviews are the hardest stage to keep blind. However, you can use "structured interviews" where every candidate is asked the same set of questions in the same order. For tech roles, tools like FaceCode offer an anti-bias feature that masks a candidate’s name with an alias during live coding sessions. This keeps the focus on the diagram board and the logic, rather than the person's identity.
The business case for diversity
Diversity is not just about fairness; it is a competitive advantage. McKinsey’s research shows that companies with diverse executive teams are 39% more likely to be more profitable than their competitors. Furthermore, for every 1% increase in racial diversity, companies have seen sales revenue grow by approximately 9%. Diverse teams solve problems faster because they avoid "groupthink" and bring more creative solutions to the table.
Measuring your success
To know if your blind hiring program is working, you need to track the right metrics.
- Quality of hire: Are the people you hire performing well and staying with the company?
- Candidate net promoter score (CNPS): Do candidates feel the process was fair and transparent?
- Adverse impact: Use the "four-fifths rule" to check if any specific group is being accidentally filtered out.
Conclusion
Blind hiring is about giving everyone a fair shot based on what they can actually do. By 2026, automation and AI tools have made this process easier than ever to scale. When you remove the click of the high heels and the bias of a name, you find the talent you’ve been missing.








