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Want a job? You'll have to convince our AI bot first

While AI hiring toolscan save time and money for businesses when all they want to do is fill a job, experts caution that the platforms can overlook qualified candidates and even introduce new biases into hiring processesif they're not carefully used.

Experts warn that as AI becomes smarter, it could also become biased towards certain candidates

Employers are increasingly using AI tools to save time and money in their hiring processes, but applicants rarely know what kind of algorithm they are up against. Here, a job applicant speaks with a recruiter during an interview in New York on May 7, 2003. (Chris Hondros/Getty Images)

Ever carefully crafted a job application for a role you're certain that you're perfect for, only to never hear back? There's a good chance no one ever saw your application even if you took the internet's advice to copy-paste all of the skills from the job description.

Employers, especially large companies, are increasingly using artificial intelligence (AI) tools to quickly whittle down applicants into shortlists to help make hiring decisions. One of the most widely used AI tools is an applicant tracking system (ATS), which can filter and rank candidates' resumes against an employer's criteria before a human recruiter looks at the best matches.

And the systems are getting smarter: some AI companies claim their platforms can not only pinpoint the most qualified candidate, but also predict which one is most likely to excel in a given role.

"The first thing workers have got to understand is: Nobody is looking at your resume. You have to run the gauntlet of the AI before you get seen [by a recruiter]," says Joseph Fuller, a professor of management practice at Harvard Business School.

While AI hiring toolscan save time and money for businesses when all they want to do is fill a job, experts caution that the platforms can overlook qualified candidates and even introduce new biases into hiring processesif they're not carefully used.

Meanwhile, human job seekers are usually in the dark about exactly which AI tools are being used and how their algorithms work, prompting frustrated searches for advice on how to "beat" recruitment software much of it only scratching the surface.

AI can 'hide' prospective workers

Last year, Fuller co-authored research into "hidden workers" applicants who are overlooked by companies due to their hiring practices, including their use of AI tools.

The researchers interviewed more than 2,250 executives across the United States, United Kingdom and Germany. They found more than 90 per cent of companies were using tools like ATS to initially filter and rank candidates.

But they often weren't using it well. Sometimes, candidates were scored against bloated job descriptions filled with unnecessary and inflexible criteria, which leftsome qualified candidates "hidden" below others the software deemed a more perfectfit.

WATCH | Expert explains rise of AI in hiring process:

Why job recruiters are increasingly reliant on AI

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Depending how the AI was configured, it could down-rank or filter out candidates due to factors such as a gap in their career history, or their lack of a university degree, even when the role didn't require a post-secondary education.

"Ninety-plus per cent of companies just acknowledge, 'We know that this process excludes qualified people,'" Fuller told CBC News.

Those overlooked candidates included immigrants, veterans, people with disabilities, caregivers and neurodiverse people, among others, he added.

The researchers urged employers to write new job descriptions, and to configure their AI to include candidates whose skills and experiences met a role'score requirements, rather than excluding them based on other criteria.

The new rules of (AI) hiring

The U.S. government has issued guidance to employers about thepotential for automated hiring software to discriminate against candidates with disabilities even when the AI claims to be "bias-free."

And from April of this year, employers in New York City will have to tell candidates and employees when they use AI tools in hiring and promotion and auditthosetechnologies for bias.

While Canada'sfederal government has its own AI use policy, there are no rules or guidance for other employers, although legislation currently before Parliament would requirecreators and users of "high-impact" AI systems to adopt harm and bias-mitigation measures tomitigate harm and bias (details about what is considered "high-impact" AI haven't yet been spelled out)..

So for now, it's up to employers and their hiring teams to understand how theirAI software works and any potential downsides.

"I advise HR practitioners they have to look into and have open conversations with their vendors: 'OK, so what's in your system? What's the algorithm like? What is it tracking? What is it allowing me to do?" said Pamela Lirio, an associate professor of international human resources management at the Universit de Montral.

A woman with long brown hair and wearing a pink sweater is seen in front of a university background.
Pamela Lirio, an associate professor of international human resources management at the Universit de Montral, says it's important for organizations to understand how their recruitment AI's algorithm works. (CBC)

Lirio, who specializes in new technologies, says it's also important to question who built the AI and whose data it was trained on, pointing to the example of Amazon, which in 2018 scrapped its internal recruiting AI tool after discovering it was biased against femalejob applicants.

The system had been trained on the resumes of past applicants who were, overwhelmingly, men so the AI taught itself to down-rank applicants whose resumes mentioned competing in women's sports leagues or graduatingfrom women's colleges.

As AI becomes smarter and more attuned to the kinds of candidates an employer likes, based on who they've hired in the past, companies run the risk of replicating Amazon's mistake, says Susie Lindsay, counsel at the Law Commission of Ontario who has researched the potential regulation of AIin Canada.

"If you quite simply are going to use a hiring tool for looking at resumes or even look at a tool for your existing employees to decide who to promote and you're looking at who's been successful to date, you're not giving the opportunity for people who don't fit that exact model to potentially advance," Lindsay said.

Several men line up outside a building which has a yellow 'Amazon' sign nearby.
Amazon shut down its experimental recruitment AI tool in 2018 after discovering it was biased against women. In this photo, job seekers line up at Amazon's job fair in Fall River, Mass., on Aug. 2, 2017. (Brian Snyder/Reuters)

Can you actually 'beat' hiring bots?

Do a web search for "how to beat ATS" and you'll find thousands of results, including from professional resume writers and online tools offering tips to help stuff your resume with the right keywords to get past the AI and onto a recruiter's desk.

But keywords are only one of many data points that increasingly-advanced AI systems use.Others include the names of companies you've worked for in the past, how far into your career you are, and even how far you live from the organization you're applying at.

"With a proper AI system that's able to understand the context of the skill and the relationships between the skills, [keyword-stuffing] is just not as fruitful as it used to be," says Morgan Llewellyn, chief data scientist at recruiting technology company Jobvite.

Instead of trying to fool the algorithm, experts recommend applying for jobs that fit the skills, knowledge and experience you really do have keeping in mind that a human always makes the final decision.

"Even if you put this keyword, OK, well, what have you done? What was your job function, job title that you've done in the past?" says Robert Spilak, vice-president at ATS provider TalentNest.

"You should meet the requirements [of the role]. If you don't meet any of those, then of course, [a] human or some automation will filter you out."

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