https://open.spotify.com/episode/2pxpS4ZomHKt516ggF6PhD?si=hc9jTjMcSSWC12hPGd73iw
In this episode of The Dstribute Podcast, the focus is on a hidden risk in modern recruiting: job board algorithms can unintentionally bury postings meant for veterans, even when federal contractors are legally required to reach them. The issue is not a technical glitch. It is built into how many platforms prioritize visibility based on engagement, click-through rates, and early performance signals. If a job post does not perform well in the first 48 hours, it can disappear from visibility, limiting access for the very candidates companies are obligated to reach.
For federal contractors, this creates a serious OFCCP compliance risk. “The algorithm did it” is not a valid defense during an audit. Regulators expect proof that outreach was meaningful and accessible. When companies rely solely on automated distribution without oversight, they create blind spots that can lead to violations, penalties, and reputational damage.
Beyond compliance, the episode highlights a broader fairness issue. Algorithms often optimize for patterns based on historical hiring data. If veterans were underrepresented in the past, automated systems may unintentionally continue that pattern. This feedback loop can make qualified veteran candidates effectively invisible.
The discussion outlines practical solutions. Companies must combine broad distribution with targeted veteran-specific job boards. They need to optimize job descriptions by translating military experience into civilian language and by including clear signals that welcome veterans. Documentation is critical, including timestamps, confirmations, and outreach records to demonstrate good-faith effort.
Measurement also matters. Organizations should track veteran applicant flow, monitor posting visibility over the required 30-day period, and adjust strategy in real time. Outreach should be proactive and data-driven, not reactive.
The core takeaway is simple: in the age of algorithms, compliance requires intentional design. Fair hiring will not happen automatically. It must be engineered through visibility, documentation, and deliberate outreach strategies that ensure veterans truly have access to opportunity.