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Diaspora's Career Challenges - You Have an Accent? How AI Decides If You're Hirable with Emmy Award Winner Journalist

You Have an Accent? How AI Decides If You're Hirable with Emmy Award Winner Journalist

01/29/25 • 35 min

Diaspora's Career Challenges

In this eye-opening episode, we reveal how AI is secretly shaping who gets hired, promoted, or fired — and why it’s a disaster for immigrants, diaspora, people with accents, and marginalized groups. With Emmy-winning investigative journalist Hilke Schellmann, we dive into the hidden biases baked into AI hiring algorithms, from accent discrimination to gender bias.

AI Bias in Hiring: From One-Way Video Interviews to Resume Screening

This isn’t science fiction, it's happening right now. Tune in to learn how AI is impacting your career, and what you can do to fight back before the robots make all the decisions.

Guest Speaker, Hilke Schellmann, Author of "The Algorithm", Assistant Professor of Journalism at New York University | Keynote Speaker | Emmy-award winning investigative journalist

Host: Sweta Regmi , Certified Career & Resume Strategist @ Teachndo

AI is rejecting you during an interview: Here is how to ace and fix it.

Your Interview Could Be With AI, Ace Job Interview!

Diaspora's Career Challenge Podcast Episodes: Diaspora’s Career Challenges | Sweta Regmi Podcast| Teachndo

Book me to speak

Sweta Regmi - Top Global Speaker, Career Strategist & Personal Branding Consultant | Teachndo Canada

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In this eye-opening episode, we reveal how AI is secretly shaping who gets hired, promoted, or fired — and why it’s a disaster for immigrants, diaspora, people with accents, and marginalized groups. With Emmy-winning investigative journalist Hilke Schellmann, we dive into the hidden biases baked into AI hiring algorithms, from accent discrimination to gender bias.

AI Bias in Hiring: From One-Way Video Interviews to Resume Screening

This isn’t science fiction, it's happening right now. Tune in to learn how AI is impacting your career, and what you can do to fight back before the robots make all the decisions.

Guest Speaker, Hilke Schellmann, Author of "The Algorithm", Assistant Professor of Journalism at New York University | Keynote Speaker | Emmy-award winning investigative journalist

Host: Sweta Regmi , Certified Career & Resume Strategist @ Teachndo

AI is rejecting you during an interview: Here is how to ace and fix it.

Your Interview Could Be With AI, Ace Job Interview!

Diaspora's Career Challenge Podcast Episodes: Diaspora’s Career Challenges | Sweta Regmi Podcast| Teachndo

Book me to speak

Sweta Regmi - Top Global Speaker, Career Strategist & Personal Branding Consultant | Teachndo Canada

Previous Episode

undefined - The Truth About Resume Whitening for Immigrants

The Truth About Resume Whitening for Immigrants

How Diaspora and Immigrants Navigate Bias Through Name Changes on Resumes.

Do Immigrants Navigate Bias Through Name Changes on Resumes?

Are they Breaking the Mold?

What would they do to fit in?

Would you change your name to an English-sounding one just to land an interview?

If you’ve never thought about it, it’s likely because you don’t have an ethnic or non-English name. For many immigrants and diasporas, the pressure to fit in starts with their resumes. They are often forced to “whiten” their resumes—removing any trace of cultural identity—to navigate biases in the hiring process.

Welcome to the world of resume whitening, where changing your name could be the difference between being called for an interview or being overlooked.

But why? It’s because companies that claim to value diversity still sometimes gravitate toward familiarity—the kind that doesn’t challenge their comfort zones.

And so, people with ethnic names are left with a choice:

• Do you embrace your identity and risk being ignored?

• Or do you conform by changing your name, all to survive in a biased system?

Some even go so far as to legally change their names to sound more “acceptable.”

And honestly, I don’t blame them. It’s survival of the fittest out here, right?

Until next time, this is Breaking the Mold: Diaspora Career Challenges, where we unpack the struggles of fitting in and the strength it takes to stand out.

Key Takeaways from This Episode

1. What Is Resume Whitening?

• Resume whitening is the practice of anglicizing names or removing cultural identifiers to reduce bias during the hiring process.

• Many job seekers, especially immigrants and diasporas, resort to this practice to improve their chances of landing interviews.

2. The Cost of Fitting In:

• Erasing a name or cultural identity can feel like losing a piece of who you are.

• This is especially true when jobseekers feel pressured to conform to workplace norms that don’t value diversity authentically.

3. Diversity & Inclusion: The Irony

• Companies often tout diversity but unintentionally perpetuate biases through hiring practices.

• The pressure to “fit in” highlights how far we still have to go in creating equitable workplaces.

4. A Message for Immigrants and Diasporas

• You’re not here to fit in. You’re here to stand out. Your name, your accent, and your identity are assets, not liabilities.

5. Resources for Job Seekers

• Looking for help to overcome bias and stand out? Check out free career and job search resources at

Career Resources for Immigrants & Newcomers by Sweta Regmi: Free Resume, Interview, LinkedIn, and Job Search Help in Canada | Teachndo

If you’ve faced challenges like these, you’re not alone. Don’t let the pressure to conform strip away your unique identity. Instead, let it be your strength.

Book me to speak

Sweta Regmi - Top Global Speaker, Career Strategist & Personal Branding Consultant | Teachndo Canada

Diaspora's Career Challenges Podcast | Sweta Regmi - Career Strategies for Immigrants & Global Professionals Teachndo

Next Episode

undefined - Finding Direction in Mixed Heritage with Emmy-nominated Producer Nina Melendez Ibarra

Finding Direction in Mixed Heritage with Emmy-nominated Producer Nina Melendez Ibarra

Finding Direction in Mixed Heritage: A Conversation with Nina Melendez Ibarra Emmy-nominated producer, journalist, LinkedIn Content Producer and Author.

I found Nina Melendez Ibarra on LinkedIn—through a post that made me stop scrolling. She had shared an article about migrant workers in Qatar and how the media needs to do better in covering these stories. It hit close to home.

As someone from Nepal, I’ve seen firsthand how migrant workers leave everything behind in search of better opportunities, only to return to coffins. It’s a reality too often ignored. So when I saw Nina speaking up, I had to know why.

That’s when I discovered her Sri Lankan heritage. It made sense—she understood. She understood what it meant to come from a place where people’s struggles aren’t always headline news.

And when I was curating speakers for my AAPI Heritage Month event last year, I knew she had to be part of it. She said yes.

Now, our conversation continues on my podcast, Diaspora’s Career Challenges.

Finding Direction When You Come From Everywhere

For those of us with mixed heritage or immigrant backgrounds, the question “Where are you really from?” follows us everywhere—sometimes spoken, sometimes just implied. And it’s not just about geography. It’s about identity. Where do we belong? Who claims us? How do we navigate careers when our backgrounds don’t fit into neat little boxes?

Nina has spent her life moving through different cultures—Puerto Rico, Sri Lanka, Japan, France, Brooklyn—always adapting, always navigating. And yet, as she told me in our conversation, the biggest lesson she learned wasn’t about fitting in. It was about standing firm in who you are.

“At the end of the day, that thing in you that lights you up is what is going to prevail. The more you push that aside for societal expectations, the more miserable you’ll be.”

The Myth of Hard Work and Finding Your Place

Many of us were raised on the belief that working hard is the key to success. But Nina learned something different:

“I was always under the impression that you had to work very hard. And I worked my butt off for the majority of my career. And I consistently saw other people advancing who did not work as hard, did not know as much, and were not as qualified. And that was weird for me to come to terms with.”

The truth? Hard work is just one piece of the puzzle.

“Don’t work harder—work smarter. Get to know the right people. Be friends with the right people. Understand how to manage up. Be unapologetic about finding ways to get into rooms and having folks who will bring you into those rooms, because this is not a meritocracy.”

For many of us from immigrant or mixed backgrounds, this is a tough lesson. We’re taught that success comes from keeping our heads down and proving our worth. But Nina’s story is a reminder: You don’t just earn a seat at the table—you claim it.

Navigating Identity & Career Growth with Nina Melendez Ibarra

🎙 In this week’s episode of Diaspora’s Career Challenges, we dive into:

Finding direction in a global identity—How to make your background an asset, not a question mark

The myth of meritocracy—Why hard work alone isn’t enough (and what to do instead)

Navigating spaces that weren’t built for you—How to take up space in leadership

Embracing your mixed heritage—Why your differences are your greatest strengths

Your Identity is Your Power

For those of us with complex identities, the world doesn’t always know where to place us. But here’s the thing: We get to decide where we belong.

💡 Instead of proving you fit, stand out.

💡 Instead of waiting for a door to open, walk in.

💡 Instead of working twice as hard, work strategically.

Free Resources: https://www.teachndo.com/free-resources

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