China Daily

AI helps young job seekers navigate competitiv­e market

- By CHENG SI chengsi@chinadaily.com.cn

The spring recruitmen­t season is in full swing and artificial intelligen­ce is helping young job seekers improve their chances of securing employment by optimizing their resumes and training them with the help of mock interviews.

Many universiti­es and recruitmen­t platforms have made AI technology available to help young applicants.

“Writing resumes is tough,” said Wang Bing, a 26-year-old from Shanghai who will complete his postgradua­te studies in June. “There are numerous ready-made templates available online, but it’s hard to choose the most suitable one. I have a lot of volunteeri­ng and internship experience, but I don’t know how to showcase my strengths.”

He said that his peers have used paid services online to polish their resumes, but the outcomes have not been consistent.

“My friend and I used a paid service that cost 100 to 500 yuan ($14 to $69) in October. He got three offers using the optimized resume, but I didn’t get a single one. It’s true that my friend’s academic performanc­e is better than mine. So I’m thinking of trying AI-aided services to polish my resume and set up mock interviews, and hope that will work.”

Zhejiang Financial College in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, is among the early adopters of AI technology. According to a tutorial on the college’s WeChat account, students can get a standardiz­ed resume after registerin­g and uploading their informatio­n on the college’s website. They can also get access to mock interviews with virtual humans and get suggestion­s after finishing the interviews.

Li Qiang, vice-president of recruitmen­t portal Zhaopin, said the use of AI can help applicants find suitable matches, as the data is analyzed in a standardiz­ed and accurate manner.

He said that big data technology can remove redundant informatio­n on a resume, and the algorithms improve match rates. He said that over 400,000 young job seekers have used AI services since Zhaopin introduced them in January.

Described as “gold March and silver April” in Chinese, spring is considered the best time in the first half of the year to look for jobs in China. The job market has been witnessing a recovery with vacancies opening up in sectors such as services, new energy and high-end manufactur­ing.

According to a recent report by Zhaopin, employers sought talent with knowledge of logistics, hotel management, new energy research and modern manufactur­ing in the first three months of the year, thanks to an increase in service-related consumptio­n.

Zhaopin said that job openings on the platform in the first quarter for logistic talent saw the highest growth of 30.4 percent year-onyear. Vacancies in the hotel and catering sector grew 24.7 percent, followed by transporta­tion-related vacancies, which rose 16.9 percent.

“There is still great pressure on the job market because of the increasing number of college graduates, about 11.79 million this year, looking for openings,” Li said. “Each vacancy has seen 28 resumes being submitted on average this season, while the number was 23 during the same period last year. High-end manufactur­ing, new energy and biomedicin­e are promising sectors, but there is intense competitio­n.”

He added that the improving economy and employment promotion policies have produced positive results, which will help keep the job market stable.

The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security said that over 36,000 job fairs had been organized nationwide by the end of last month, with over 29 million job openings available.

 ?? HE PENGLEI / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? Job seekers use an AI job applicatio­n area at a recruitmen­t fair in Chongqing on April 9.
HE PENGLEI / CHINA NEWS SERVICE Job seekers use an AI job applicatio­n area at a recruitmen­t fair in Chongqing on April 9.

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