AI Is Coming for Your Job Interview—And It’s Judging Every Word
AI Is Coming for Your Job Interview—And It’s Judging Every Word Companies are increasingly turning to artificial intelligence to conduct job interviews, automating a process once handled solely by humans. These systems can range from chatbots that ask questions to software that analyzes a candidate’s video responses for tone, word choice, and facial expressions [129582]. This shift is part of a broader transformation in the professional world driven by AI. Consulting giant PwC is undertaking a major global restructuring to adapt to the technology, focusing on retraining its workforce and reshaping its services as AI threatens to automate many traditional analytical and advisory tasks [128415]. Across industries, the definition of valuable work is changing. As AI takes over more technical functions, “glue work”—the human skills of mentoring, collaboration, and project coordination—is becoming more critical [128201]. The push for efficiency is also hitting manufacturing. Automaker Nissan is cutting 20% of its car models and betting on AI to streamline development, production, and customer service in a bid to survive intense electric vehicle competition [128228]. For job seekers, the experience of an AI-led interview can be unsettling. Candidates report interacting with systems that ask standardized questions and assess responses against predefined benchmarks, often with little human oversight [129582]. The technology’s rise underscores a pivotal moment where the tools used to evaluate and hire employees are being redesigned, raising new questions about fairness, bias, and the human touch in the workplace. AI Interview? We Want to Hear Your Story. PwC to Slash 100,000 Jobs? AI Forces Consulting Giant's Overhaul AI Era Set to Elevate Critical "Glue Work" in the Workplace Nissan Bets on AI, Cuts Car Models to Survive
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