Obstacles
Employers, and, by extension, all recruitment agencies, employment agencies etc., need to focus on talent, competencies and motivation and match these assets to the right task set. Automated resumé screenings are the first obstacle to the employment of persons with a mental disability in the NEC.
A second obstacle is the resistance to inclusive employment. We ourselves, for example, ran into difficulties with a physician connected to the insurance fund. He refused to approve our researcher with a mental disability for work. Switching insurance funds eventually solved the problem.
A third factor for the low rate of employment of persons with a mental disability in the NEC is the administrative maze which employers must negotiate.
The final hurdle is the lack of knowledge. Our investigation showed that the majority of employers would employ persons with a mental disability as a social commitment. Figures show great willingness to embrace flexibility when it comes to task packages, supervision, work hours, and even investment in personal development. However, test results show that the same surveyed employers do not know which tasks they could assign to persons with a mental disability and that they fear resistance in the ranks and a loss of profitability. Furthermore, they are unsure about which institutions to address for financial public support and how to find the right statute for their employee or mentoring in the workplace.
As business schools, we approach the problem from a management point of view, the main concern being how we can help employers translate their social engagement to the shop floor and tap into an unknown source of motivated and talented employees. Based on our research, white paper and employer survey, we composed the following list of five guidelines to enable the sustainable employment of an employee with a mental disability.