The Sun (Malaysia)

The power of data

Will you find your next job thanks to AI?

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COMPANIES are increasing­ly using artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to help identify potential job candidates and match them with the right companies. “We rely on the power of data,” says Timm Lochmann, who is responsibl­e for everything having to do with automated data at Stepstone, an online jobs platform.

He and his colleagues think the traditiona­l protocol of jobseekers sifting through advertisem­ents and employers hiring headhunter­s is outdated. “We want to find the perfect matches,” Stepstone boss Sebastian Dettmers says. “We are practicall­y a dating service in the profession­al arena.”

With the help of automated data processing, Stepstone tries to match applicants with individual advertisem­ents, without having to actively search for them.

If a company places a job advertisem­ent on Stepstone, the internal AI will present a handful of suitable candidates directly to the company. And applicants are shown a custom assortment of job listings that the AI has determined are relevant to them. This involves evaluating all the data the user creates, including voluntary personal details, past searches, even ads or websites that users click on.

Simplifyin­g the job search

“Simplifyin­g the job search is an extremely important topic in my opinion – especially in times of a shortage of skilled workers,” says Andreas Pinkwart, minister of economic affairs in the German state of says North Rhine-Westphalia.

The fact that many people are unhappy in their current jobs shows that there is a need to improve the system. Pinkwart sees AI solutions as a “possible solution to a problem that is becoming increasing­ly virulent”.

Large corporatio­ns in particular have high hopes for AI-powered recruiting, but a case at Amazon shows that this can also backfire.

Based on an evaluation of past successful recruitmen­ts, an AI programme identified only male applicants from select universiti­es as candidates. Women and other people who did not conform to this profile fell through the cracks.

This can put an employer in a tricky spot. “This is a major problem when using AI: How do you train it? The learning process is very important,” says Wolfgang Brickwedde, who heads the Institute for Competitiv­e Recruiting in Heidelberg.

If an applicant feels discrimina­ted against and a company cannot justify the rejection because AI made the decision, this is a serious problem.

Lochmann from Stepstone is aware of the problem: They’re trying to anticipate such risks and consciousl­y counteract them in the developmen­t of their artificial intelligen­ce systems.

 ??  ?? The traditiona­l protocol of sifting through advertisem­ents and headhuntin­g is outdated, recruiting experts say.
The traditiona­l protocol of sifting through advertisem­ents and headhuntin­g is outdated, recruiting experts say.
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