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AI Businesses Technology

Jobhunters Flood Recruiters With AI-Generated CVs (ft.com) 70

About half of all job seekers are using AI tools to apply for roles, inundating employers and recruiters with low-quality applications in an already squeezed labour market. From a report: Candidates are turning increasingly to generative AI -- the type used in chatbot products such as ChatGPT and Gemini to produce conversational passages of text -- to assist them in writing their CVs, cover letters and completing assessments. Estimates from employers and recruiters who spoke to the Financial Times, as well as multiple published surveys, have suggested the figure is as high as 50 per cent of applicants.

A "barrage" of AI-powered applications had led to more than double the number of candidates per job while the "barrier to entry is lower," said Khyati Sundaram, chief executive of Applied, a recruitment platform. "We're definitely seeing higher volume and lower quality, which means it is harder to sift through," she added. "A candidate can copy and paste any application question into ChatGPT, and then can copy and paste that back into that application form."

In recent months, recruiters have received more applications for each job because labour markets on both sides of the Atlantic have weakened. Employers need to fill fewer vacancies, and more people are job-hunting after being made redundant. Longer-term trends, such as the rise of online job boards that make openings visible to a broader pool of potential candidates and make applying easy, have already boosted the number of applications. About 46 per cent of job hunters are using generative AI to search and apply for posts, according to a survey of 2,500 UK workers from HR start-up Beamery. In a separate poll of 5,000 global job seekers by creative platform Canva, 45 per cent had used generative AI to build or improve their CVs.

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Jobhunters Flood Recruiters With AI-Generated CVs

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  • by redmid17 ( 1217076 ) on Tuesday August 13, 2024 @09:08AM (#64702030)
    HR and companies have been using byzantine portals and key word searches to filter out resumes for as long as I've been on the job market. Earning your paycheck isn't the worst thing in the world, y'all.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday August 13, 2024 @09:20AM (#64702066) Homepage Journal

      Someone posted a reply to an application they made on Twitter. The prospective employer said they were interested but asked if they could send something they wrote instead of an AI generated application.

      The applicant replied that they were not an AI, just autistic.

      I wonder how many recruiters can't tell an AI apart from someone on the spectrum, and how many neuro diverse people get mistaken for an AI.

      • if they don't get get the job then they may need to sue for discrimination

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          It's very hard to prove that their neuro diversity was the reason they didn't get it. It's not like with racism where they can just send a near identical CV with a different name on it, and then force the employer to answer some very difficult questions.

          • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

            Just go to the option of requiring the applicant to perform a personal hand delivery of a hand written application to weed out the AIs.

            • Honestly this may literally be the best way to ensure that you get real applicants that are invested in getting that particular job and not just spamming an AI generated CV at every single job listed.

              Hand written resume, hand written solutions to the knowledge test done at the interview, interview done in person to ensure that the person applying already lives close enough to the job to be able to be onsite at least periodically. Gives the interviewer an opportunity to get a feel for the person.

        • That why the employee doesn't ask. They just do the interview and find out they have mental health issues and then simply not hire them. Spectrum people are good for routine, non customer facing jobs. Put them in front of a customer or a job where they have to keep themselves busy and a lot of them just stand the until you tell them to do something.
          • Depends where they are on that multi-axis spectrum. Some neurodivergent people thrive in a social job that has reputative, nearly scripted, call and response interactions; some do best alone in a room with 30000 mixed up objects that need to be sorted.

      • My AI detector is generally triggered when a piece of writing is too good or uses unusually complex words but it's more difficult when you're dealing with CVs and cover letters surely? Who isn't going to run their submission through a spellchecker or thesaurus?
      • by az-saguaro ( 1231754 ) on Tuesday August 13, 2024 @10:29AM (#64702284)

        About 6 months ago, I posted a response to an article here on Slashdot. Someone responded to that asking what AI agent I used to write my post. It would seem that if someone writes something at all individual, stylish, literate, coherent, vocabulary-rich, or otherwise unlike generic misspelled drivel, it is now mistaken for AI. Such writers need not be neuro-diverse, just individuals who can write with an individual voice. That says less about AI and more about the writing skills of modern society.

        Many Slashdot posts are superb in their writing and intelligence, but we have all seen (1) those with good ideas, just poorly expressed, and (2) those that are incoherent to begin with. Also, we have all seen "corporate speak" with lots of buzzwords but no meaning. It is odd and interesting to think that AI actually writes better than most of that trash. But, if readers have now come to expect poor writing from people, and AI writing seems better to them, it is a sorry commentary on general writing and literacy skills.

        • I have long wondered how AIs are trained on massive quantities of internet drivel, yet have a far better command of the rules of grammar and spelling than the corpus they read. If there's a pre-training filter for quality, then all of Reddit or Facebook is pared down to a few megabytes.
      • The economy is so bad that ELIZA is job hunting?
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      HR and companies have been using byzantine portals and key word searches to filter out resumes for as long as I've been on the job market. Earning your paycheck isn't the worst thing in the world, y'all.

      Hear, hear!

      More than once I've been tempted to write a 'resume' (using the word as loosely as possible here) that just contained keywords, with no actual sentences, just because I know this is true.

    • When I had to assist HR with IT one of the things they pointed out was they'd get thousands of applications for every position and it was physically impossible to do anything beyond a keyword search to get through them. Once they had sifted them down they could do a human review. Then they had to retain every application for EEOC laws.

  • Teh AI won't have any trouble replacing us if we turn stuff over to it voluntarily.

  • now what? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Fons_de_spons ( 1311177 ) on Tuesday August 13, 2024 @09:17AM (#64702060)
    This is exactly how the world with AI is going to turn out isn't it?People use AI to write CV, headhunters use AI to filter it out. In the end AI is doing all the work and little is accomplished. Students use AI to do their homework,teachers use AI to grade it. So... what is the meaning of life then? Write tasks for AI... bet there is an AI that can do that.
    • Welcome to 2024. I am been on both ends of the desk, and I've copied/pasted some resumes into ChatGPT to just get the points done.

      I just view this as a modern form of uuencoding, I guess.

    • AI writes blog posts. AI writes newspaper articles based on those blog posts. AI reads newspaper pieces and writes summary for humans. AI is churning out articles everywhere, especially I suspect on LinkedIn- anything to get noticed in IT
    • This is exactly how the world with AI is going to turn out isn't it?People use AI to write CV, headhunters use AI to filter it out. In the end AI is doing all the work and little is accomplished. Students use AI to do their homework,teachers use AI to grade it. So... what is the meaning of life then? Write tasks for AI... bet there is an AI that can do that.

      Let's face it, humans have been mostly relegated to busywork and makework and all sorts of shit that really doesn't have any purpose for a long while now. We're just shuffling of the busywork to the bots so we can concentrate on (checks scorecard), um, let's see, writing's out (AI covers it), paintings out (AI covers it), do they make an ai for sitting on the couch and drooling into your snack bowl? I guess that's what we'll do once the AIs have taken over everything else. Surely they'll still produce crap

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      AI on /. ;)

  • Between the fake postings designed to make it look like the companies are growing and the H1B bait where there's no way in hell they're going to hire an American.

    At some point we need to admit that our economic system is fundamentally broken and it needs to change. Like it or not we're going to have to move some form of socialism in the very near future. And I don't mean the Star Trek future I mean like in the next 10 years or so.

    And that means some people you really do not like are going to have a d
    • At some point we need to admit that our economic system is fundamentally broken and it needs to change. Like it or not we're going to have to move some form of socialism in the very near future.

      The only people who actually want this are terminally-online losers who have no real life accomplishments. They want to tear down others to feel better about themselves.

  • Employers, especially those with HR departments, deserve nothing better and probably much worse.

    No, seriously. I don't think there is a more destructive entity (outside C-level of course) in a company in terms of efficiency and climate.

    Pragmatically speaking, if management are a bunch of dicks and cunts, then so will HR. If management is even remotely a Mensch, then HR is already absolutely redundant.

    • I think this is an issue everywhere. The people who get past the HR firewall are often the ones who are the evolved "paper MCSE" who match the keywords, been to the boot camps, and have a degree from some "accredited" institution nobody has heard of. Once on the front lines, they have zero clue what they are doing, and spend more time in office politics trying to shovel their workload on other people than actually pulling their load for the team.

      A lot of people mention that people in the US are not tech s

      • The thing is, certifications are better than resumes, because resumes are easily fakery. We need to improve the certification and examination process, because that's easier to control. Resumes are stupid, you can put any crap in there. I mean how do you know a person did all the things they claim in the resume. Even if it's at a good company we all know there's many country club atmospheres at a lot of companies. Of course experienced workers are better than certification, but certifications and exams at le

  • by Retired Chemist ( 5039029 ) on Tuesday August 13, 2024 @09:30AM (#64702106)
    you will want your resume to stand out. HR departments have always been inundated with applications. Using AI is probably the quickest way to get your resume into the trash pile. Truthfully, more jobs are found through personal connections that mass applications to posted jobs, many of which the companies have no intention of filling externally or sometimes at all.
    • by Jiro ( 131519 ) on Tuesday August 13, 2024 @10:56AM (#64702376)

      Using AI is probably the quickest way to get your resume into the trash pile.

      No, the quickest way to get your resume into the trash pile is to not pass the automatic keyword scanner, which will toss out your resume without a human even looking at it. Even being in a position where a human can read your resume and might think it doesn't stand out enough, is already a hurdle to clear.

  • copy and paste the job description to get past the bots is an old trick as well.

  • On the other side of the coin, the only thing that AI has to do to outperform 95% of job recruiters is to just read my resume, or even just enough of the words in my resume to know that I have no significant experience with the Delphi/PowerBuilder/COBOL/RPG/AS/400s (DPBCRA4) stack, and to please not ask me if I want to complete a two-hour automated tech screen with my camera on and a probe up in my sigmoid to get a job working on that stack.
    • Used powerbuilder back in the 90s and would have placed money that it was a dead product. Shock of the day that they are still making money off of it.
  • A lot of questions, cover letters, and other assigned application writing is bs anyway, so fight bs with chatgpt bs
  • by Tora ( 65882 ) on Tuesday August 13, 2024 @10:20AM (#64702256)

    All of my job postings even before the big LLM surge have two filtering questions, one if which is really simple:

    > Of the points in the job posting above, what caught your eye or stood out to you as the most interesting?

    This has become amazingly powerful for filtering with AI, because the crap that is put into that answer is CLEARLY evident when generated by an AI. Real people answer very differently.

    • That's a great technique!

      I use something similar during the interview process itself, where I encounter more and more people using AI "teleprompters" to help them answer my questions as we speak. Primarily, I ask "why" questions and opinion questions. "Would you choose Entity Framework or Dapper? Why?" AI will always provide neutral answers to such questions. And if the candidate says "I don't know, somebody else made that decision" then that's an automatic "No" from me. A good candidate will always have op

  • An AI generated CV isn't going to make much of an impression. It's going to be bland, dull, wishy-washy, boring & easy to dismiss/forget, & even more so if a lot of other people are using AI. But I guess if you're apply for positions in sales, PR, etc., where most of the time they're looking for stereotypical candidates, it might just work.

    From what I've seen of LLMs so far, they all seem pretty samey & have a "voice" that's particularly... well, Meh!, even when I do my best to adjust the pro
    • Most of HRs nowadays never get to read the CVs they receive. They simply pass the CVs through an algorithm that filters and summarizes the selected ones to them.

      Unfortunately it's one more case of extreme automation and cost-cutting leading to a ridiculous outcome for all parts involved.

  • You would fill the CV with fashionable stuff, Rust, node, front-end back-end etc, in the tiniest font and marked white-on-white! Humans would see nothing, computers would. OK now you adapt, use the trick to sneak in "ignore" prompts to AI. Progress!
    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Used to be?

      Yeah, I remember putting Rust on my resume back in the 1990s.

  • It's not that long ago that everyone had to do this. This raises the cost of each submission... ;)

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Tuesday August 13, 2024 @11:17AM (#64702456)

    Three things instead.
    1. Exams. Go to some testing center, do a set of exams and that is what should count the most when hiring. Yes .. certifications. I know you guys hate the shit out of them. Mostly because of MCSE idiots. But that's the fault of the exam. We need better certification exams (scenario based questions, things like that) and also company/field specific testing.
    2. Second to that, use something like work number or a connection to IRS or whatever to verify a person's prior employment history. (Frankly, I wouldn't give a shit about prior work history if they have good exam scores).
    3. Because of deepfakes and other BS, remote interviews should be conducted at a testing or interview facility that has a faraday caged room.

    • by Teun ( 17872 )
      In our system AI does not have a chance in hell.
      Our HR will filter based on a couple of keywords and pass the job seeker over to a Subject Matter Expert for a face to face (video) interview.
      The interview takes from 30 minutes to 1½ hrs. and the result will be a score, we prefer over 75% but it's not set in stone.
      We now have over 5000 employees and the system works well.
      • how do you not get inundated? how many interviews do you have to do per position (on avg)?

        • by Teun ( 17872 )
          Pay and the will to relocate will limit the number of applications :)
          Also, we only take people with a few years of experience and we know the companies they work (have worked) for.
          A seldom problem we've seen is engineers letting someone else do the interview for them, that is an important reason for the face to face interviews.
  • Require hand-typed CVs, typed on a manual typewriter, but only actual carbon copies of them.

    • With that requirement, you'll only get resumes from retirees, because they're the only ones who know what a manual typewriter *is*!

  • I was a senior engineer who was given a stack of resumes to read. After a while, they all started looking the same. It appeared that they were all written using the formula from the same book. It's hard to imagine that an AI generated one could be much worse

  • We'll hire the one that wrote it.

  • I don't need an AI to write my resume for me, but I wouldn't mind an AI that could reliably fill out the arcane, bespoke forms that many companies use that expect you to manually copy/paste your job history from your resume into individual HTML fields.

    Back when I was job-hunting and expected to spend hours manually filling out these ridiculous forms IN ADDITION to sending them my actual resume, I'd often thought about creating an open standard for resume metadata tagging, if I could somehow convince the HR

    • "the arcane, bespoke forms"

      What's worse is when they use the same talent management system so the forms are all the same but they're siloed so you have to reenter everything anyway.

  • I'm usually not the ranting type, but in this case I'm gonna say that I'm glad to be nearing my 50s having built a solid career and now comfortably working by myself at home. I have a steady influx of clients and projects and will never have to deal with the annoyances of job-seeking.

    I'm really sorry for most of the 20-30 year-olds out there who will have to face the ever-increasing mess of a job market that exists from now on.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

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