For years, employee referrals have been HR’s favourite hiring shortcut. They are faster, often more cost-effective and frequently produce candidates who understand the organisation’s culture before they even walk through the door.
But as diversity, equity and inclusion become stronger business priorities, referrals are facing growing scrutiny. Do they quietly reinforce existing networks and create workplaces filled with people who think, behave and hire alike?
The tension is real. Referrals can signal strong employee trust in an organisation, but if left unchecked, they can also perpetuate homogeneity. The real challenge, therefore, is not whether referrals should exist, but whether organisations can design referral systems that support both cultural fit and broader diversity goals.
Sahil Mathur, Chief Human Resources Officer, Licious
Yes, referrals work, but only when standards remain identical for everyone.
Referrals remain one of the strongest hiring channels available to organisations. The problem begins when referred candidates are treated differently or allowed to bypass the hiring standards that apply to everyone else.

The hiring process exists to identify the best-fit candidate, and that process cannot be compromised. When referral candidates clear the same assessments successfully, organisations naturally feel more confident because existing employees already understand what success looks like within the company.
But referrals should not receive special treatment. The only advantage they should get is speed. Referred profiles can be reviewed faster, but once candidates enter the evaluation process, the standards must remain exactly the same.
There is also a cultural benefit that organisations often overlook. Employees tend to refer people they trust and are comfortable working with. That familiarity can strengthen belonging, psychological safety and collaboration within teams.
The risk emerges only when referrals are allowed to bypass systems designed to ensure fairness and objectivity.
Takeaway: Referrals should accelerate access to opportunities, not create shortcuts through the hiring process; speed may differ, but standards must not.
Priyanka Vanjari, Head – HR, PNG Jewellers
No, referrals do not threaten diversity; weak hiring processes do.
Referrals should absolutely remain an important hiring channel. The real issue is not referrals themselves, but how organisations design and govern referral programmes.

At PNG Jewellers, clear guardrails exist. Employees are discouraged from referring candidates into the same department, function or store where they work. Instead, referrals are directed toward different teams or locations, reducing the possibility of tightly connected clusters forming within the same environment.
Trust also plays a significant role. Employees are careful about recommending people because their own credibility becomes attached to the referral. That accountability often improves the quality of recommendations.
When it comes to diversity, the real differentiator is the assessment process. Whether candidates come through referrals, job portals, agencies or campus hiring, the evaluation criteria should remain identical.
Diversity is not weakened by referrals alone. It weakens when organisations become inconsistent in how they evaluate talent.
Takeaway: Diversity outcomes depend less on where candidates come from and more on how fairly and consistently organisations evaluate them.
Nihar Ghosh, Senior HR Leader
It depends on whether employees behave like talent scouts or placement agents.
The effectiveness of referral programmes depends heavily on organisational culture.
In organisations where employees feel engaged and connected, referrals are usually thoughtful. Employees recommend people they genuinely believe can contribute because they want the organisation to succeed.

But referral programmes can quickly become transactional. Employees may start referring candidates simply because a friend needs a job or because incentives are attached. When that happens, quality declines and organisations become flooded with unsuitable profiles.
This is why organisations must invest time in explaining the intent behind referral programmes. Employees need to understand that referrals are not favours; they are contributions to organisational success.
Whether incentives exist or not, context-setting is critical. Employees should clearly understand the kind of talent the organisation values and why thoughtful referrals matter.
Without that clarity, referral programmes gradually lose effectiveness and credibility.
Takeaway: Referral programmes succeed when employees act like talent scouts identifying future contributors, not placement agents filling vacancies for friends.



