&w=3840&q=100)
Job interviews enter a strange new world with AI software that talks back
For better or worse, the next generation of job interviews has arrived: Employers are now rolling out artificial intelligence simulating live, two-way screener calls using synthetic voices.
Startups like Apriora, HeyMilo AI and Ribbon all say they're seeing swift adoption of their software for conducting real-time AI interviews over video. Job candidates converse with an AI 'recruiter' that asks follow-up questions, probes key skills and delivers structured feedback to hiring managers. The idea is to make interviewing more efficient for companies — and more accessible for applicants — without requiring recruiters to be online around the clock.
'A year ago this idea seemed insane,' said Arsham Ghahramani, co-founder and chief executive officer of Ribbon, a Toronto-based AI recruiting startup that recently raised $8.2 million in a funding round led by Radical Ventures. 'Now it's quite normalised.'
Employers are drawn to the time savings, especially if they're hiring at high volume and running hundreds of interviews a day. And job candidates — especially those in industries like trucking and nursing, where schedules are often irregular — may appreciate the ability to interview at odd hours, even if a majority of Americans polled last year by Consumer Reports said they were uncomfortable with the idea of algorithms grading their video interviews.
At Propel Impact, a Canadian social impact investing nonprofit, a shift to AI screener interviews came about because of the need to scale up the hiring process. The organization had traditionally relied on written applications and alumni-conducted interviews to assess candidates. But with plans to bring on more than 300 fellows this year, that approach quickly became unsustainable. At the same time, the rise of ChatGPT was diluting the value of written application materials. 'They were all the same,' said Cheralyn Chok, Propel's co-founder and executive director. 'Same syntax, same patterns.'
Technology allowing AI to converse with job candidates on a screen has been in the works for years. Companies like HireVue pioneered one-way, asynchronous video interviews in the early 2010s and later layered on automated scoring using facial expressions and language analysis —features that drew both interest and criticism. (The visual analysis was rolled back in 2020.) But those platforms largely left the experience static: candidates talking into a screen with no interaction, leaving recorded answers for a human to dissect after the fact.
It wasn't until the public release of large language models like ChatGPT in late 2022 that developers began to imagine — and build — something more dynamic. Ribbon was founded in 2023 and began selling its offering the following year. Ghahramani said the company signed nearly 400 customers in just eight months. HeyMilo and Apriora launched around the same time and also report fast growth, though each declined to share customer counts.
'The first year ChatGPT came out, recruiters weren't really down for this,' said HeyMilo CEO Sabashan Ragavan. 'But the technology has gotten a lot better as time has gone on.'
Technical stumbles
Even so, the rollout hasn't been glitch-free. A handful of clips circulating on TikTok show interview bots repeating phrases or misinterpreting simple answers. One widely shared example involved an AI interviewer created by Apriora repeatedly saying the phrase 'vertical bar pilates.' Aaron Wang, Apriora's co-founder and CEO, attributed the error to a voice model misreading the term 'Pilates.' He said the issue was fixed promptly and emphasized that such cases are rare.
'We're not going to get it right every single time,' he said. 'The incident rate is well under 0.001%.'
Chok said Propel Impact had also seen minor glitches, though it was unclear whether they stemmed from Ribbon itself or a candidate's Wi-Fi connection. In those cases, the applicant was able to simply restart.
Braden Dennis, who has used chatbot technology to interview candidates for his AI-powered investment research startup FinChat, noted that AI sometimes struggles when candidates ask specific follow-up questions. 'It is definitely a very one-sided conversation,' he said. 'Especially when the candidate asks questions about the role. Those can be tricky to field from the AI.'
Startups providing the technology emphasized their approach to monitoring and support. HeyMilo maintains a 24/7 support team and automated alerts to detect issues like dropped connections or failed follow-ups. 'Technology can fail,' Ragavan said, 'but we've built systems to catch those corner cases.'
Ribbon has a similar protocol. Any time a candidate clicks a support button, an alert is triggered that notifies the CEO. 'Interviews are high stakes,' Ghahramani said. 'We take those issues really seriously.' And while the videos of glitches are a bad look for the sector, Ghahramani said he sees the TikToks making fun of the tools as a sign the technology is entering the mainstream.
Preparing Job Applicants
Candidates applying to FinChat, which uses Ribbon for its screener interviews, are notified up front that they'll be speaking to an AI and that the team is aware it may feel impersonal.
'We let them know when we send them the link to complete it that we know it is a bit dystopian and takes the 'human' out of human resources,' Dennis said. 'That part is not lost on us.'
Still, he said, the asynchronous format helps widen the talent pool and ensures strong applicants aren't missed. 'We have had a few folks drop out of the running once I sent them the AI link,' Dennis said. 'At the end of the day, we are an AI company as well, so if that is a strong deterrent then that's OK.'
Propel Impact prepares candidates by communicating openly about its reasons for using AI in interviews, while hosting information sessions led by humans to maintain a sense of connection with candidates. 'As long as companies continue to offer human touch points along the way, these tools are going to be seen far more frequently,' Chok said.
Regulators have taken notice. While AI interview tools in theory promise transparency and fairness, they could soon face more scrutiny over how they score candidates — and whether they reinforce bias at scale. Illinois now requires companies to disclose whether AI is analyzing interview videos and to get candidates' consent, and New York City mandates annual bias audits for any automated hiring tools used by local employers.
Beyond Screening Calls
Though AI interviewing technology is mainly being used for initial screenings, Ribbon's Ghahramani said 15% of the interviews on its platform now happen beyond the screening stage, up from just 1% a few months ago. This suggests customers are using the technology in new ways.
Some employers are experimenting with AI interviews in which they can collect compensation expectations or feedback on the interview process — potentially awkward conversations that some candidates, and hiring managers, may prefer to see delegated to a bot.
In a few cases, AI interviews are being used for technical evaluations or even to replace second-round interviews with a human. 'You can actually compress stages,' said Wang. 'That first AI conversation can cover everything from 'Are you authorized to work here?' to fairly technical, domain-specific questions.'
Even as AI handles more of the hiring process, most companies selling the technology still view it as a tool for gathering information, not making the final call. 'We don't believe that AI should be making the hiring decision,' Ragavan said. 'It should just collect data to support that decision.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
8 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
This 30-year-old billionaire still shops at Shein, drives old Honda: ‘I don't like wasting money'
At 30, Lucy Guo has dethroned Taylor Swift as the world's youngest self-made billionaire. Despite her staggering net worth – Forbes estimates it to be $1.3 billion – this 30-year-old college dropout does not believe in wasting money. In fact, Lucy tells Fortune that her wardrobe is dominated by free clothes or fast fashion - barring the odd designer dress. She still drives a Honda Civic and flies commercial. 'I don't like wasting money,' the 30-year-old told Fortune. Lucy Guo is an American social media influencer and co-founder of Scale AI. She founded the company in 2016 and was fired two years later following a disagreement with co-founder and CEO Alexandr Wang. Lucy was just 21 when she launched the AI startup. A computer science student at Carnegie Mellon, she had dropped out of college and interned with Facebook before she built Scale AI. Despite being fired, Guo retained an estimated 5% stake in Scale AI. It is this stake that gives her her status as the world's youngest self-made billionaire at age 30. 'Everything I wear is free or from Shein,' Guo, now the founder of OnlyFans competitor Passes, told Fortune. 'Some of them aren't going to be that great quality, but there's always like two pieces or so that really work out, and I just wear them every day,' she added. Her thriftiness does not end at clothes - this Miami and Los Angeles-based billionaire still drives an old Honda Civic and doesn't believe in private jets. If it's a long flight, Guo does splurge on a business class ticket. 'I still literally buy buy-one-get-one-free on Uber Eats… in terms of like daily life, my assistant just drives me in a pretty old Honda Civic. I don't care,' she says. 'Who you see typically wasting money on, designer clothes, a nice car, et cetera, they're technically in the millionaire range,' Guo explains. 'All their friends are multimillionaires, or billionaires and they feel a little bit insecure, so they feel the need to be flashy to show other people, 'look, I'm successful.''


Mint
14 minutes ago
- Mint
ION Founder to Pay €280 Million to Settle Tax Probe: Carlino
(Bloomberg) -- ION Group founder Andrea Pignataro has reached an agreement with Italian tax authorities to pay €280 million ($319 million) to end a probe into alleged tax evasion, Il Resto del Carlino reported on Sunday. Prosecutors in Bologna, where the fintech billionaire was born, had originally sought up to €1.2 billion in arrears, interest and other costs relating to a period up to 2023, according to the newspaper. He'll make the payments in instalments over five years, Carlino said. While a criminal case against him remains open, the settlement could work in his favor in that process, the newspaper said. Although Pignataro claims to reside in Switzerland and most of ION's business is in the UK, officials said he was liable to pay taxes in Italy because his family has lived there throughout the period, Carlino said. Investigators pored through travel and phone records and examined his personal relationships to conclude that he spent most of his time in his home country, according to the report. A representative for Pignataro declined to comment. The Italian tax authority couldn't immediately be reached outside business hours. Pignataro has quietly become one of the most important men in Italian finance, building a network of companies that control data, trade securities and help the European Central Bank manage the euro. In Italy, through ION, Pignataro controls financial services firms Cedacri SpA, Cerved Group SpA and Prelios SpA. That means the group handles large amounts of data on Italian borrowers and companies, while providing software for most lenders. He's also bought stakes in Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena SpA, Illimity Bank SpA and Cassa di Risparmio di Volterra. After studying at Bologna University, Pignataro worked as a bond trader in London, where he later received a doctorate in math from London's Imperial College. While working for Salomon Brothers, he helped lead a joint venture with Pisa-based software firm List Holdings, filings show. That business would eventually become ION Trading UK, the start of what is now ION Group. Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News, competes with ION in providing financial software and data. --With assistance from Luca Casiraghi. (Updates with response from Pignataro representative in fourth paragraph.) More stories like this are available on


News18
42 minutes ago
- News18
'India Is Central To..': Canadian PM Mark Carney After Inviting PM Modi To G7 Summit
Last Updated: Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said he extended an invitation to PM Modi for the upcoming G7 Summit, owing to India's importance in global supply chains. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney on Saturday clarified his decision to invite Prime Minister Narendra Modi to the upcoming G7 Summit being held in the Canadian province of Alberta, saying India is central to a number of supply chains. Responding to a media query about inviting PM Modi to the Summit, Carney said he extended the invitation after consulting with other G7 member-countries. Canada is hosting the G7 Summit from June 15 to 17 as the current chair of the group. 'Canada's in the role of the G7 chair and in those discussions has agreed with our G7 colleagues include important discussions on energy security, on digital future, critical minerals, amongst others, and partnerships actually in building infrastructure in the emerging and developing world," he said during a briefing. 'India's Presence Is Essential' 'There are certain countries that should be at the table for those discussions, and in my capacity as G7 chair, in consultation with others, some others, make those determinations." Carney's remarks came after his political opponents criticised him for inviting PM Modi amid an ongoing probe surrounding the 2023 killing of Khalistani terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar, which soured ties between India and Canada. 'India, the fifth largest economy in the world, effectively the most populous country in the world, central to a number of those supply chains at the heart of a number of supply chains so it makes sense," Carney said. On Friday, Carney had emphasised that India's presence at the intergovernmental political and economic forum is essential, where discussions on important issues, including security and energy, would be held. Carney said that India and Canada are acting on law enforcement. 'In addition, bilaterally we have now agreed importantly to continued law enforcement to law enforcement dialogue so there's been some progress on that recognizes issues of accountability I extended the invitation to Prime Minister Modi for in in that context and he has accepted it," he said. PM Modi Confirms Participation PM Modi on Friday confirmed he would attend the upcoming Group of Seven (G7) leaders summit in Canada after an invitation from newly elected Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney. 'Glad to receive a call from Prime Minister Mark J Carney of Canada. Congratulated him on his recent election victory and thanked him for the invitation to the G7 Summit in Kananaskis later this month. As vibrant democracies bound by deep people-to-people ties, India and Canada will work together with renewed vigour, guided by mutual respect and shared interests. Look forward to our meeting at the Summit," he said in a post on X. Notably, India-Canada ties nosedived in the aftermath of Nijjar's killing after former PM Justin Trudeau publicly alleged New Delhi's role behind the killing. India has repeatedly denied these allegations, and has taken a decisive stand against what it perceives as Canada's non-seriousness in dealing with the Khalistan issue. Carney has not commented so far on whether he believed India had any involvement in pro-Khalistan activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar's killing. 'There is a legal process that is literally underway and quite advanced in Canada, and it's never appropriate to make comments with respect to those legal processes," he said. First Published: June 08, 2025, 13:38 IST