
Jobs: Is artificial intelligence going to be your next interviewer?
'It explained that I could schedule the interview at my preferred time a week or two in advance and had other instructions as well — like there was a formal dress code for the interview, there had to be zero noise in the background, and a good Internet connection was a must during the call,' explains Veerapandi, who now lives in Abu Dhabi.
On the day of the interview, Veerapandi clicked on a link and entered a web application that looked a lot like Zoom or Google Meet where he was greeted by, well, no one. There were no human heads on the screen to exchange pleasantries with.
Instead, the screen was split into two. 'Half the screen was reserved for the interview transcript and the other half was for my video,' he says. Questions rolled out on the screen and as Veerapandi answered them, he watched his voice getting converted into text on screen.
That's when it hit him — the whole process, starting with that email, was managed by artificial intelligence, or AI (and, he learnt later, AI-based recruitment platform Vettio). Veerapandi didn't get a callback but the experience was surreal and thrilling enough to share with his friends in Singapore. 'They were amazed,' he says.
AI-powered virtual recruiters and interviewers are not the future — they are very much part of the present as companies around the world have begun integrating AI into HR-specific tasks, including interviews, which many, until recently, believed was too sacrosanct to be touched by AI.
In the UAE, for instance, IT solutions provider Business Experts MEA is exploring chatbot-assisted interviews to streamline initial candidate screening, says Claire Abboud, head of HRMS, eXperts People 365 at Business Experts MEA LLC. 'These tools can accelerate response times and reduce bias in early-stage evaluations,' she explains. The company already uses AI across its HR systems like 'candidate shortlisting, leave requests, receipt-based expense claims, and employee frequently asked questions,' she says, and 'voice-activated self-service and AI-driven workforce planning will be next'.
NEED FOR SPEED
Just minutes before our conversation, Aws Ismail, director of recruitment, outsourcing and training provider Marc Ellis, sent an offer letter to a candidate who had been sourced, interviewed, shortlisted and invited for a final, face-to-face interview in two short working days entirely through their six-month-old 'Smart AI Voice Recruiter', Sarah.
Recruiters are typically expected to select three candidates for clients, after surfing through hundreds of applications, within 48 hours so AI's superhuman speed is an invaluable asset. The most industrious human recruiter can perhaps contact about 15 to 20 candidates in a day, but Sarah can reach out to 1,000 to 3,000 candidates at the same time, says Ismail. 'And when a candidate speaks, it's able to understand whether the person has the required technical skill sets and is suited for the job as it can retain vast amounts of information and knowledge about a specific job or the latest technologies,' he adds. Sarah also generates a report with the names of the shortlisted candidates along with extra inputs, like they are '80 per cent or 90 per cent fit for the role', and these reports speed up their 'overall sourcing and interviewing time by about 40 per cent,' says Ismail. 'Our recruiters then pick up the phone and talk to these shortlisted candidates.'
Sumit Kumar Singh is the founder of AceAI, which works with higher education setups to teach students about AI, offers consulting services to corporates who want to become 'AI-first' entities, and delivers AI products based on their requirements. 'We help them to build what they need — this could be an AI interviewer, internal policy bots, call summariser or help to rate resumes,' says Singh. He explains that AI virtual recruiters and interviewers fall under the category of 'Agentic AI' and that although there is high interest around it, it can be 'massive overkill for standard, rule-based processes where the outcomes are pre-determined and defined, with no surprises. Like, classifications, categorisation, ticket status and so on,' he elaborates.
He also highlights the pitfalls of using them — the most obvious one being that they are unable to read visual cues. 'And false positives may get filtered as it may be easy to fake your way in with a virtual interviewer,' he adds.
THE HUMAN FACTOR
Last year, Sonny Dhamayana, who works in AI and blockchain technology, attended five such interviews. Like Veerapandi, Dhamayana didn't know he would be speaking to an AI interviewer until he sat facing a humanoid (three interviews were voice and text-based). The interview was a technical one, which included questions on topics like coding. 'It kept repeating my answers to ensure that it got them right before recording and analysing my answers,' says Dhamayana.
The next round of interviews was conducted by humans, but he points out that companies should clearly state in their emails to candidates that interviews are going to be conducted by an AI recruiter, and that their responses will be recorded and analysed.
'I feel like they took some data from me. We need to focus on having responsible and trustworthy AI,' he says, adding that he would probably prefer AI to conduct technical interviews as questions are typically quite direct and to the point but have a human interviewer take over in the later rounds, where candidates and recruiters are likely to discuss the role, work timings, salary and other details. 'But the good part is that you get the results the same day,' he says.
Veerapandi took a few minutes to adjust to his interview, which lasted for about an hour. With the benefit of hindsight, he reflects that one has to keep answers crisp and to the point. The questions were based on his CV and it was impossible to steer the conversation away from areas he wasn't an expert in and concentrate on his strengths instead, like he would have been able to do in a regular interview.
'But an AI interviewer will ask follow-up questions and move on to the next topic only when it is 100 per cent satisfied,' he says. In fact, when he did try to discuss his strengths, Veerapandi says that it politely suggested that he stick to the specific topic it had broached. 'Because it knows the clear prompt, your resume and the job description,' he says.
However, the name of the company that was hiring wasn't revealed at any point and Veerapandi was unable to ask questions about the role as the interview did not facilitate two-way communication. 'You could ask it to clarify a question but it was mostly one-way communication as it had a plan and went about executing it like a machine,' he says, describing the interview as more of 'first-level filtering'.
And as someone who also conducts interviews after pouring over hundreds of CVs for a single job vacancy, Veerapandi feels that using AI in the initial rounds of recruitment can save a lot of time and identify the right candidates early.
Companies insist they are striving to strike a balance between AI and the human workforce in the field of HR. 'AI is a powerful accelerator, but it's not a substitute for empathy,' explains Abboud. 'While it can reduce bias, handle administrative tasks and support predictive insights, decisions around culture fit and emotional wellbeing still require human intuition. It's all about balance — letting machines do the heavy lifting so humans can stay human. And final interviews and team fit assessments still benefit from human dialogue. Responsible AI means keeping ethics and transparency front and centre — not replacing people, but empowering them.'
Ismail, too, points out that the number one skill set in recruitment is building relationships and establishing trust. 'And AI cannot replace that fully, but it will enable recruiters to, like I said, make quicker decisions and to get the right candidates quickly.'

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


Al Etihad
an hour ago
- Al Etihad
UAE Chambers explores investment opportunities with Mali
17 Aug 2025 19:02 SHARJAH (WAM)The Federation of the UAE Chambers of Commerce and Industry highlighted investment opportunities in the Republic of Mali during the UAE-Mali Business Forum, hosted by the Sharjah Chamber of Commerce and Industry (SCCI), in collaboration with UAE Chambers and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA).Vice Chairman of the Federation of UAE Chambers of Commerce and Industry and Chairman of SCCI, Abdallah Sultan Al Owais, extended a warm welcome to the Malian trade delegation visiting the UAE from August 13 to praised the growing bilateral relations between the two friendly countries and emphasised that the investment opportunities on offer present strong appeal for Emirati investors, especially within the framework of the UAE's economic diversification Owais affirmed the commitment of the UAE Chambers, and specifically the Sharjah Chamber, to actively promote these opportunities among their business communities to encourage investment in Mali, pointing out that they cover a wide range of emphasised the UAE business community's growing interest in exploring Mali's investment environment, underlining the UAE Chambers' commitment to strengthening cooperation with their Malian counterparts in the coming pointed out plans to sign a memorandum of understanding aimed at establishing a joint business council that will serve as a structured platform for direct engagement between private sector representatives from both sides. The council will focus on strategic sectors such as agriculture, food security, infrastructure, energy, and Owais voiced his optimism that the UAE-Mali Business Forum would serve as a catalyst for expanded trade and investment cooperation between the UAE and Malian delegation, headed by Madiou Simpara, President of the Mali Chamber of Commerce and Industry, presented a portfolio of investment opportunities to the UAE proposed projects span key sectors such as renewable energy, artesian wells, and infrastructure development, and include the establishment of both a large-scale commercial complex and a sports complex. Additional opportunities covered manufacturing, urban development, and land transport sectors, in addition to the construction of a state-of-the-art international Simpara invited the UAE business sector's representatives to visit Mali and assess first-hand the viable investment opportunities of mutual economic value. He noted that the Chamber of Mali seeks to foster stronger collaboration with the UAE chambers across multiple sectors, with the objective of advancing commercial cooperation and reinforcing bilateral trade ties.


Khaleej Times
an hour ago
- Khaleej Times
UAE emerges as top global greenfield FDI attractor
In a resounding affirmation of its global investment magnetism, the UAE has once again reinforced its status as the world's most effective attractor of foreign direct investment (FDI), relative to its economic size. According to the 2025 Greenfield FDI Performance Index by fDi Intelligence, the UAE topped the list — outperforming 104 other economies — with a remarkable index score of 14.26, meaning it secured more than 14 times the volume of greenfield FDI projects expected for its GDP scale. This outstanding performance placed the UAE ahead of Namibia, Costa Rica and all other economies surveyed. Although project growth was modest at 1.8 per cent in 2024, the Emirates was still ranked as the second most popular FDI destination in the world, behind only the United States. The UK, India and Germany followed in third, fourth and fifth positions. The inflows underline the country's expanding appeal as a global hub for business and innovation. According to the Unctad World Investment Report 2025, the UAE received Dh167.6 billion (about $45.6 billion) in FDI last year, representing a surge of 48 per cent compared with 2023. This elevated the country into the ranks of the world's top 10 recipients of foreign investment, despite the global slowdown. Within the Middle East, the UAE's dominance was striking — it accounted for nearly 37 per cent of the region's total inflows, more than a third of all foreign capital entering the Arab world. Greenfield investment was a central driver of this success. The UAE attracted 1,369 projects in 2024, securing second place globally after the US. Capital commitments for these projects reached Dh53.3 billion ($14.5 billion), reflecting resilience in an environment where global growth in greenfield projects slowed to less than one per cent. Business services, financial services and technology remained the top sectors, while renewable energy, real estate, transport and consumer products also recorded strong momentum. Investment consultants argue that the UAE's performance is more than a story of numbers. It is a narrative of transformation, built on foresight, ambition and the ability to execute. 'By combining stability, openness and innovation-driven growth, the Emirates have created an ecosystem that attracts capital, talent and ideas from every corner of the globe. At a time when global FDI is under pressure, the UAE has emerged not just as a regional hub but as a model for economies seeking to leverage investment as a catalyst for long-term prosperity,' said James Mathew, CEO and managing partner of UHY James. Mathew added that the UAE's success is not a matter of coincidence but a reflection of long-term planning. 'The UAE has transformed foreign investment into a tool for economic diversification, reducing reliance on hydrocarbons and expanding its industrial, financial and knowledge-based sectors.' The National Investment Strategy 2031 sets out an ambitious goal of increasing FDI inflows to Dh1.3 trillion and tripling cumulative stock to Dh2.2 trillion. This vision dovetails with other strategic blueprints such as Artificial Intelligence 2031 and Centennial 2071, which seek to embed technology and innovation across the economy. These efforts have not gone unnoticed by global investors. In 2024, Microsoft announced the creation of a global engineering development centre in Abu Dhabi. This year, the company partnered with AI firm G42 to build sovereign cloud and artificial intelligence infrastructure. Such moves underscore the UAE's ability to attract not only capital but also high-value projects that anchor knowledge economies. Google's activities in the country alone contributed Dh21.8 billion ($5.9 billion) to GDP in 2024, while Microsoft's investments are projected to generate Dh273 billion in revenues and over 152,000 jobs by 2028. Part of the UAE's enduring appeal lies in its enabling environment. Foreign investors benefit from a liberal business climate that allows 100 per cent ownership in most sectors, a competitive corporate tax rate of nine per cent, streamlined licensing procedures and robust arbitration mechanisms through institutions like the Dubai International Arbitration Centre. On the talent front, long-term Golden Visas and flexible Green Visas make it easier for skilled professionals and entrepreneurs to relocate and build futures in the Emirates. The establishment of a federal Ministry of Investment in 2023, led by Mohamed Hassan Al Suwaidi, further centralised efforts to attract capital and promote opportunities. Digital platforms such as 'Invest UAE' provide global investors with a one-stop gateway into the country's diversified economy. Equally important are the UAE's international agreements. The country has signed 21 Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreements and over 120 bilateral investment treaties, ensuring that capital inflows are protected and integrated into global trade frameworks. Its nonaligned foreign policy also positions it uniquely as a bridge between East and West, maintaining investor confidence in a region often marked by volatility. The trajectory over the past decade illustrates how far the Emirates have come. FDI inflows climbed from Dh31.6 billion ($8.6 billion) in 2015 to Dh167.6 billion ($45.6 billion) in 2024, representing a compound annual growth rate of more than 10 per cent. The country's cumulative FDI stock now stands at about $270 billion. Beyond capital, it has become a magnet for human capital — ranked fifth globally for overall talent competitiveness and third in AI talent generation in 2024, according to INSEAD and Stanford.


Zawya
an hour ago
- Zawya
Sharjah Chamber, Dibba Al Hisn Municipality to launch the 12th Al Maleh and Fishing Festival on August 28
Sharjah: The Sharjah Chamber of Commerce and Industry (SCCI) and the Dibba Al Hisn Municipality are set to launch the 12th edition of the Al Maleh and Fishing Festival from August 28 to 31, 2025, at Al Hisn Island. The festival aims to highlight the emirate's commitment to preserving maritime heritage while supporting the growth of traditional industries, further enhancing Sharjah's role as a hub for heritage-based economic activities. It is considered one of the region's most prominent heritage events dedicated to the age-old Al Maleh (salted) fish industry, underscoring the joint commitment of the Sharjah Chamber and Dibba Al Hisn Municipality to safeguarding the UAE's cultural heritage by celebrating ancient maritime professions that were central to coastal communities throughout history. Beyond its cultural value, the event stimulates economic and tourism activity in the Eastern Region and promotes the sustainability and long-term viability of marine-based industries by providing an interactive platform that integrates traditional practices with modern approaches to sustainable development. HE Mohammad Ahmed Amin Al Awadi, Director-General of SCCI, said that the Al Maleh and Fishing Festival is a cornerstone of the Sharjah Chamber's strategy to link cultural heritage with economic growth. 'Organized annually, the festival is positioned as part of Sharjah's future economy strategy, creating a platform that empowers productive families and entrepreneurs in the marine industries. It further enhances market access for their products, fosters exposure to wider audiences, and facilitates new business partnerships and investment opportunities in heritage-driven industries,' he added. For his part, HE Talib Abdullah Al Yahyai, director of Dibba Al Hisn City Municipality, stated that the city 'represents a cradle of the UAE's maritime heritage, with its people taking pride in hosting another distinguished edition of the Al Maleh and Fishing Festival, which embodies the spirit of Dibba Al Hisn and its deep connection to the sea and the life of fishermen.' He underlined efforts to enhance the festival's impact through upgraded infrastructure, better organization, and expanded program of diverse activities to further enrich visitor experiences and reinforce Dibba Al Hisn's position as a sustainable cultural and tourism destination. The Al Maleh and Fishing Festival serves as a platform to explore the ancient UAE tradition of salting fish while passing it on to younger generations. The festival's agenda this year includes educational workshops on age-old maritime crafts like Al Maleh creation, salting, and canning, alongisde traditional fishing tools. The program also includes awareness seminars on sustainable fishing practices, cultural competitions to enrich public knowledge of maritime heritage, and live showcases of traditional crafts such as shipbuilding and net-making. This year's edition attracts significant participation from maritime-focused government departments, private sector companies, and retailers specializing in the Al Maleh (salted fish) industry. It also provides a platform for productive families to showcase a variety of handcrafted heritage products, including salted fish, traditional foods, and artisanal tools. Key features of this year's festival include the 'Salted Fish Market,' an agricultural products section, and a traditional food court, alongside exhibition spaces for advanced fishing gear, engines, and boats. Collectively, these elements foster business partnerships, promote sectoral innovation, and support the sustainable growth of the maritime economy. The Sharjah Chamber and the Dibba Al-Hisn Municipality invited Sharjah residents and visitors to take part in the upcoming Al Maleh and Fishing Festival, set to deliver an immersive heritage experience enriched by cultural displays, traditional flavors, and live performances. Running for four days from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., the festival provides an avenue to highlight the UAE's maritime identity and supports the continuity of traditional crafts by combining historical pride with forward-looking ambitions for sustainable cultural and economic development. For further information, please contact: - Ali Elgendy Misbar Communications ali@ Ahmad Aldwairi Misbar Communications