If you’ve been recruiting for more than a few years by now, the changes these processes have undergone will have been difficult to miss. Hiring used to be a pretty standard, simple process – post a job ad, CVs pile up, a few interviews, decision made. In 2025, the process feels more like a mesh of overlapping tasks, many of them handled – or at least partially handled – by artificial intelligence. But what does that impact look like?

Faster Screening
Modern applicant tracking systems no longer just scan for a handful of keywords. They’re able to weigh context, career patterns, even sector-wide hiring trends.
An applicant with a string of six-month roles might once have been filtered out as a risk. Now, an advanced system can tell when short contracts are normal in that line of work. Recruiters get fewer irrelevant CVs clogging up their inbox, and more time to speak with people who actually can do the job.
But there is one common pitfall with these kinds of systems: unconventional candidates still fall through the cracks. Someone who switched careers twice, or built skills in a less formal setting, may still be overlooked if the machine’s model doesn’t know how to value those kinds of experiences.
To balance this out, sharper HR teams are pairing AI shortlists with a manual scan, just to catch the ones that don’t quite fit AI’s idea of a good candidate.
AI Interview Analysis
There are platforms now that come with AI to analyse tone, pace, and even facial expressions. In theory, it can highlight who stays calm under pressure and who struggles when questioned. For some managers, this is useful – the tool can even hint at where extra training or support might help before day one.
But the readings aren’t always that accurate. Cultural background, neurodivergence, or just a shaky Wi-Fi connection can throw the data off, sometimes putting certain people (and employers) at a disadvantage.
In the UK, there’s already potential for creating rules forcing employers to explain when – and how – AI plays a role in candidate assessment.
Smarter Job Ads, Narrower Pools

AI sourcing tools can scrape professional networks, niche forums, and even side projects posted online to spot people who haven’t applied for potentially niche roles. This is gold for industries where the best candidates aren’t actively job-hunting.
Still, over-targeting has a dark side. The algorithm’s “ideal profile” can end up repeating the same biases humans already have, shrinking the talent pool without people actually realising.
Compliance
AI isn’t able to take over from more important, compliance dependent functions yet, like background checks. Those still typically need to be undertaken by external contractors like Personnel Checks, and we don’t see that changing any time in the near future.
AI is shaking up recruitment in every direction, making it quicker, sometimes fairer, but it’s not without its blind spots. In the end, the smartest employers are using it like a co-pilot: great for speed and reach, but not the one making the final call.
Thanks for stopping by!
Magda
xoxo