For entry level stuff, there is almost no choice for the applicant
But for something that requires talent, expertise and a specific set of skills, knowledge and education ... you're probably better off just talking to people and connecting to people the old fashion way - networking one on one.
If I had the network in the UK, I would. Not a single one of my old L.A. entertainment industry people has contacts in the UK. It's like there's a wall of separation.
Yeah, the crazy requirements, most of which are impossible, unreasonable, or are meant to be wish-list kinds of things mean the scores are all useless. It's just the people who game the system and lie who get good scores anyway. Probably the least good candidates. And ,sure, by default it "shows all candidates". Buy if you don't have a score because you opt out, that likely puts you at the bottom when sorted or removes you when the HR person filters the results. But that's not their fault, that's the user, despite it being their design that allows for and encourages using the scores that way.
Why do you think an AI is in the position to know what makes a qualified individual? It probably rejects every resume it views as not fitting its standard template. Wanting to hire the next Einstein? Well too bad, he's neurodivergent and he doesn't write a resume the way the AI wants him to. Also, he has an "ethnic" name so that's an automatic rejection.
Do you think there’s enough information in the application to decide? If that information is there, then you shouldn’t categorically assume AI is being racist against Einstein. Personal review of resumes is notoriously rife with bias - you actually might want to consider that AI could be an improvement. The guy with the ethnic name might get a high AI score and actually get a second look. You don’t know the AI performs worse than humans in the things you care about. Be real: you have no information about that at all.
There's no template that is looked for in my company's case. And it's not black and white, accept/reject, rather it's trained to score applicants on a predefined set of criteria set by my company. It's used as a tool to basically sort the resumes from strongest to weakest, most applicable to least. Depending on how many resumes are received, all of them might still be reviewed by a human. We don't and never have used a candidate's name at any point in the review process.
"Neurodivergent" had to have been a front runner for 2024 word of the year.
Yeah, people are just kneejerk "I hate AI", but this is one of the cases where it could actually be useful. HR doesn't have time to trawl through all of your previous employers, but AI does.
The people downvoting you refuse to recognize one simple fact: employers are absolutely drowning in unqualified applications for jobs. People completely ignore the requirements and apply anyway, or even install browser extensions that automatically fill out applications by the dozen. But oh! How dare the employer do anything but read all 600 applications and carefully read between the lines to consider applicants who have no experience but want a ‘career change!’ How dare they try to bin the worst 300 automatically!
In Japan, the culture around this is very different. People don’t apply for things unless they are highly qualified and meet the specific requirements. People tend to switch jobs less often and are more intentional about it. In the US it’s “I’m unemployed, time to spam.” This is despite the fact that for ever and ever, experts have been telling people “send fewer applications to more targeted jobs.” I’m sure everyone thinks they are doing this, but believe me, as a collective - no one else is.