20th January 2026

From diversity targets to inclusive hiring: A Q&A with Magda Hoffman

Inclusive hiring - Magda Hoffman

This Q&A brings together Women in Tech and Magda Hoffman, Director at Red Dog Talent Solutions to explore how inclusive hiring and progressive workplace cultures can reshape the UK technology sector. From addressing unconscious bias to supporting women returners and improving salary transparency, this conversation shines a light on practical, evidence-based actions organisations can take to help women not only enter tech, but thrive long-term.

What are the biggest barriers women in tech still face when it comes to being hired or progressing their careers – and how can inclusive hiring strategies help to address these?

Two things jump out at me: unconscious bias in hiring and promotion, and rigid ways of working. Women still make up only about 21% of the UK IT workforce, and I regularly see great candidates screened out because their CV doesn’t look “linear” or they’ve had a career break. On top of that, many tech roles don’t offer flexibility – only 5% of tech jobs in the UK are part-time – which punishes women juggling care responsibilities. We also can’t ignore the “tech bro” culture that makes women feel invisible or unwelcome.

Fixing this starts with how we hire. For me, that means writing short, clear job ads (ditch the 20-bullet wish lists) and using neutral language so women aren’t put off from the start. It means looking past career gaps and focusing on skills, perhaps using anonymised CVs or coding tasks, because automated systems often reject anyone with a gap of over six months. Most importantly, use structured interviews and scoring rubrics; they’re almost twice as predictive and far fairer than “gut feel” chats. Also, put salary bands on job ads – women are more likely to undervalue themselves, and transparency stops lowball offers. Inclusive hiring isn’t a silver bullet, but it removes barriers and gives women a fair shot.

How can organisations move beyond simply meeting diversity targets to build genuinely inclusive cultures where women feel valued and supported to thrive long term?

It’s not enough to hire more women if the culture pushes them out. Women leave because they can’t see a path up; poor career progression, lack of recognition and pay inequity are the top reasons. To tackle this, senior leaders need to own inclusion, not delegate it to HR. That means regularly reviewing promotion, reward and project allocation data by gender, and holding managers accountable for closing gaps. It also means making flexibility the norm – hybrid working, part-time options and predictable hours – so women aren’t penalised for being parents or carers.

I’m a big believer in formal mentorship and sponsorship, because women often miss out on the networks that propel men forward. Setting up internal women-in-tech groups or cross-company mentoring circles gives women a community and a champion. Lastly, listen to the women already in your business. Exit interviews and pulse surveys aren’t just for show; act on what they tell you.

When women feel seen, heard and developed, they stay. If they don’t, they leave – even if you’ve hit your diversity “number”.

What practical steps can hiring managers take to make recruitment processes more inclusive – from the way roles are advertised to the structure of interviews?

As someone who places tech talent for a living, I’d suggest three simple steps:

  • Rewrite your job ads: Focus on outcomes and must-haves; avoid macho jargon; and explicitly mention flexible or part-time options. Add a line saying you welcome applications from people who don’t tick every box – research shows women only apply if they meet all criteria.
  • Standardise the process: Use the same questions and scoring criteria for every candidate, and train your interviewers. Structured, competency-based interviews dramatically reduce bias and are more predictive of performance. Also, make sure your panels are diverse; a single woman on a shortlist almost never gets hired.
  • Review your shortlist: Don’t automatically bin people with gaps or non-traditional backgrounds. Consider skills tests or project-based tasks to assess ability directly. And always list salary ranges to remove negotiation bias.

These aren’t difficult, but they take discipline. In my experience, the companies that implement them not only see more women progressing; they make better hires overall.

You work closely with women returners. What are some of the common challenges they experience when re-entering the workforce, and how can employers better support their return to work?

Women returners are a huge untapped resource – yet many face the “career break penalty”. Automated CV screeners often reject anyone out for more than six months, while human recruiters assume a gap equals “rusty skills”. Many returners also suffer a crisis of confidence: they worry they’re out-of-date and end up taking lower-level jobs. They usually still need flexibility to manage care, but find tech roles rigid.

What works? First, stop filtering out CVs with gaps. Instead, advertise roles as returner-friendly and encourage people to address their break in a cover letter. Offer “returnship” or “supported hire” programmes: 3–6-month paid placements with training, mentoring and a clear path to a permanent role. Provide refresher training to update technical skills and pair returners with a mentor or buddy. And give them real flexibility; phased or part-time returns make all the difference. When employers invest in returners, they gain experienced, loyal staff and close mid-level gaps quickly. It’s a win-win.

Are there any innovative approaches to inclusive hiring or supporting women returners that you think are setting new standards within the UK tech industry?

Definitely. I’m inspired by cross-company initiatives like the Tech Talent Charter and programmes run by Women Returners. These schemes bring together multiple employers to offer structured returnships with coaching and peer support. Fintech firms like Starling Bank explicitly tell women, “apply even if you don’t tick every box,” and back it up with mentoring and a clear route to a permanent job.

I’ve also seen success with skills-based hiring platforms that anonymise CVs and let candidates demonstrate their abilities through projects or coding challenges. Organisations like Code First Girls and Tech Returners are offering women-only bootcamps that lead straight to job placements. The best employers combine these external initiatives with internal changes – e.g. using software to scan job ads for gendered language, analysing recruitment data by gender and intersection, and making flexible policies standard.

AI is playing a role too:

  • Tools that flag gendered language in job ads before they go live.
  • Bias audits for AI-driven CV screening to ensure career gaps aren’t penalised.
  • Skills-first matching platforms using AI to prioritise ability over job titles.
  • Predictive diversity analytics to forecast outcomes and adjust hiring strategies.

What sets these approaches apart is that they don’t treat diversity as an afterthought; they redesign the pipeline to bring women in at every level.

Salary transparency and benchmarking are becoming increasingly important discussions in the UK – how can these practices help to close the gender pay gap and drive fairness?

The gender pay gap is still around 10% for full-time UK employees, and tech sits on the wrong side of that average. Lack of transparency is a big reason why. Publishing salary ranges in job ads removes the guesswork and discourages lowball offers, especially since women are less likely to negotiate hard. It also stops the pernicious practice of anchoring offers to previous salary – a pilot where employers agreed not to ask about salary history showed women got fairer offers.

Internally, regular pay audits and transparent pay bands hold managers accountable. Companies required to report their gender pay gap publicly have been prompted to investigate discrepancies. As a recruiter, I encourage clients to benchmark roles externally and set bands based on the work, not on what candidates ask for. When everyone knows the range, it’s harder to quietly pay women less. And it builds trust: employees know you value fairness, and they’re more likely to stay.

In your experience, what are some of the most overlooked motivators for women in tech roles, and how can organisations use these insights to attract and retain diverse talent?

Beyond pay and flexible hours, there are a few motivators I see overlooked:

  • Job security and stability: In a volatile sector, many women (especially carers) value knowing they can rely on their role.
  • Supportive management: Women who get regular feedback and advocacy from their managers stay longer.
  • Purpose and impact: Many women in tech are driven by doing meaningful work.
  • Recognition and progression: Clear promotion criteria and visible recognition go a long way.

If you design roles and cultures with these motivators in mind – and you talk about them in your recruiting – you’ll attract women who want to grow and stay. It’s not rocket science: it’s treating people as whole humans with ambitions and lives outside work.

Looking ahead, what key trends do you see shaping the future of inclusive hiring and gender diversity across the UK technology landscape?

Three trends stand out:

  • Greater transparency and intersectionality: Expect more detailed pay gap and diversity reporting – not just by gender, but by race, disability and more.
  • Hybrid work and AI – double-edged swords: Hybrid is here to stay; it offers flexibility, but risks “out of sight, out of mind” for those working remotely. Organisations will need clear norms to ensure remote staff get equal opportunities. And AI in hiring and performance management must be audited for bias – without checks, algorithms can amplify existing inequities.
  • Political and social headwinds: The backlash against diversity programmes in some countries is influencing global firms to scale back DEI targets. UK tech companies have a chance to differentiate themselves by doubling down on inclusion even as others retreat.

Overall, I’m optimistic. Younger generations demand fairness and diversity, and the data clearly shows that inclusive cultures drive better business outcomes. The organisations that take a values-led, evidence-backed approach will attract the best talent and set the tone for the industry.

Picture of Magda Hoffman

Magda Hoffman

Magda Hoffman, founder of Red Dog Talent. I help growing businesses build Microsoft capability and hire well without the agency chaos through faster decisions, predictable costs, and a hiring process that stays under control.

I spent the last decade working with Microsoft partners, including Avanade / Accenture and SFW Ltd (now Civica), across in-house and RPO models. I’ve hired hundreds of Microsoft-skilled professionals and built hiring processes that protect leadership time, with 97% retention beyond 12 months and around 95% offer acceptance.

What pushed me to go solo was simple. Hiring was too often reactive, and agency support didn’t feel like a true partnership. Although the effort was there, the structure wasn’t.

That’s when I realised that hiring doesn’t need to be expensive to be high quality and SMEs deserve support that fits their needs, not a one-size-fits-all model.

That’s why I built Red Dog Talent, in-house quality hiring, without the traditional agency model, focused on partnership, precision matching, strong candidate experience, and a process that delivers every time.

I’m also passionate about helping more women thrive in tech. At Avanade, I was honoured to win the Women in Tech Employer Awards 2020: Best In-house Recruiter. For me, it’s about confidence, progression, and making sure women get the support to step up and lead.