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But in the field of HR, they have also become quite popular thanks to Natural Language Protocol (NLP). Firstly, they were used as landing page calls to action. Then, they were used as prompts that popped up within job applications.Today, mobile-enabled chatbots are able to assess candidates, undertake pre-screening interviews and schedule further interviews with successful candidates, as well as support recruitment professionals with all other processes, including receiving applications and acknowledging their receipt, making job offers and receiving accepted offers, beginning the onboarding process and more. Given that roughly 43% of candidates never hear back from a company after applying, chatbots can certainly make the process kinder on everyone - especially for high volume recruiting that requires communication with thousands of candidates.
In terms of proofreading alone, chatbots can offer a huge advantage to HR professionals. With the ability to read resumes quickly and match skill-sets to those advertised, plus proof-read for errors or irrelevant answers given in interview questions, much of the heavy lifting during recruitment can be
automated, saving HR professionals valuable time.
As expected, respondents were most comfortable interacting with bots not during the interview itself but during the scheduling and interview preparation process.That’s not to say chatbots will be integrated into the recruitment landscape without fault: lack of empathy, language barriers, unpredictable candidate replies and malicious attacks are all challenges that recruitment chatbots might encounter.
Tech companies are working fast to overcome such challenges, to ensure their mainstream integration into the HR space.Already, 15 percent of HR professionals say that artificial intelligence and automation are currently affecting their workforce, while 40 percent expect to see chatbots make an impact within five years. At California-based customer interaction platform Alorica, chatbots have been used for almost two years already and are embedded in job ads placed online by the company. ESPN and its recruitment company Montage, as another example, worked with a chatbot provider to recruit interns and diversify its on-air talent. In just six weeks, ESPN attracted 560 candidates from across 53 countries - something that would never have been possible in such a short time frame using traditional recruiting tools.
By 2020, Gartner predicts the average person will have more conversations with chatbots than with their spouse, and recruitment will be no exception.For candidates to land roles, they will need to adjust their interview style accordingly: simplify their answers, include key terms in their responses, and above all else remember that professionalism and courteousness must be maintained, good manners could still be a part of the test.