“…Based on theories of ageism, which demonstrate that people have implicit preferences for young over old (Levy & Banaji, ), and on evidence that youth is more often associated with competence and relatively higher status (Abrams, Russell, Vauclair, & Swift, ; Cuddy, Norton, & Fiske, ; Fiske, Cuddy, Glick, & Xu, ), we expect people to be more willing to hire a candidate with a relatively younger stereotypic profile even though there is no explicit information about that candidate's age. However, given the multidimensional nature of old‐age workplace stereotypes (Dordoni & Argentero, ; Swift, Abrams, & Marques, 2012), we assume there may be circumstances that might moderate bias based on tenure (Postuma & Campion, ) and status of the position (Abrams et al., ).…”