Job Titles
Generally provokes a mental image of men
To reach out to all genders, use gender-inclusive options to describe how someone contributes to a company’s mission.

Grundlagen Beispiel

Erweitertes Beispiel

We use job titles to understand if we’re a good fit for the position a company is looking to fill. And that includes our gender. As many as 79% of jobs ads imply, if unintentionally, the gender of the person expected to do that job. Childhood role models, too, influence who we see when we think of a job. These biases limit candidate pools, pipelines - and the career options and prospects of people of all genders and backgrounds. For an inclusive approach, explore more gender-neutral ways of describing areas of responsibility.
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Software developmentSoftware engineering
Software engineer – all genders
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Software engineerWen diese Sprache nicht einbezieht?
- Menschen, die sich als Frau identifizieren
- Menschen in der LGBTQIA+ Gemeinschaft
- Menschen in Berufen und Rollen, die historisch von einem anderen Geschlecht dominiert wurden
- Menschen mit nicht-weißer Abstammung oder kulturellem Hintergrund
Wir verbeugen uns vor
- Hidden but Widespread Gender Biases Emerge in Millions of Words (Tessa Charlesworth)
- Language influences mass opinion toward gender and LGBT equality (Margit Tavits and Efrén O. Pérez)
- The subtle ways language shapes us (Nayantara Dutta)
- Evidence That Gendered Wording in Job Advertisements Exists and Sustains Gender Inequality (Danielle Gaucher, Justin Friesen, and Aaron C. Key)
- Sexist Job Titles and the Influence of Language on Gender Stereotypes (Sylvia Cutler)