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HireVue Unveils Reimagined Hiring Experience and Solidifies Its Role As the Backbone of Skills-Based Hiring at Horizon Conference
HireVue Unveils Reimagined Hiring Experience and Solidifies Its Role As the Backbone of Skills-Based Hiring at Horizon Conference

Yahoo

time27-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

HireVue Unveils Reimagined Hiring Experience and Solidifies Its Role As the Backbone of Skills-Based Hiring at Horizon Conference

HireVue Demonstrates Its Vision for Skills-First, Candidate-Centric Hiring With a Redesigned UX, Purpose-Built AI Features, and Advanced Skill Validation Salt Lake City, UT, March 27, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- HireVue, the global leader in skills-based hiring, delivered an immersive and impactful experience for talent leaders with the return of its user conference, Horizon. Attendees heard from industry pioneers and customers, including Goldman Sachs, AT&T, PepsiCo, and Spectrum. At the heart of the event was a first look at a suite of new products, including a Talent Match and Apply agent and the next generation of video interviewing with Interview Insights. HireVue also showcased a new UX that drives efficiency for users throughout the talent journey. These innovations underscore HireVue's commitment to transforming hiring with Agentic AI and a seamless, skills-first experience. "These innovations demonstrate HireVue's commitment to being the backbone of skills-based hiring," said Jeremy Friedman, Chief Executive Officer of HireVue. "With talent teams now seeing an increasing number of AI-generated resumes, they need sophisticated skill validation tools that can keep pace with today's hiring demands. Our new solutions provide exactly that, enabling organizations to focus on what matters: accurately assessing candidates' true capabilities." AI Agents: Powering the Future of Hiring and Empowering Candidates It is not enough to simply add generative AI to existing products. HireVue's team built its new Match and Apply chatbot by unifying the latest large language model technology with 20+ years of deep knowledge and experience. Designed for rapid deployment, Match and Apply leverages generative AI, engaging in a natural conversational dialogue that potential hires have come to expect as consumers. Instead of relying on keyword matching or scripted prompts, Match and Apply adaptively considers a candidate for all relevant roles while personalizing the experience to ensure no opportunity is missed. Interview Insights: Greater Clarity and Consistency to the Most Critical Step in Hiring The hiring process hinges on interviews, yet without the right tools, it can be the least structured and most error-prone component in the talent journey. Interview Insights changes that by leveraging skill-based highlights and AI-generated summaries so recruiters receive rapid clarity on candidate strengths. Interviewers receive coaching and structure to improve consistency, while talent leaders get visibility into interviewer behavior and effectiveness. 'In a world where skills are evolving faster than ever, hiring systems have to stay ahead of where the market is headed,' said Marcy Daniel, Chief Product Officer at HireVue. 'Combining HireVue's experience with innovation in hiring technology, AI, and selection science means we can deliver talent teams the tools they need for the hiring demands of today–and tomorrow.' To schedule a demo of HireVue's newest products, visit here. About HireVue HireVue helps organizations elevate the hiring conversation from evaluating candidates' credentials to understanding their capabilities. The company's deep expertise in selection science and AI helps companies understand an applicant's unique skills and potential to match them to jobs where they can excel today while suggesting a future path. Serving over 1,150 pioneering customers around the globe, including over 60% of the Fortune 100, HireVue has hosted over 70 million video interviews and 200 million chat-based candidate engagements. HireVue social networks LinkedIn: CONTACT: Chelsea Kilpack Hirevue press@ in to access your portfolio

AI hiring software was biased against deaf employees, ACLU alleges in ADA case
AI hiring software was biased against deaf employees, ACLU alleges in ADA case

Yahoo

time25-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

AI hiring software was biased against deaf employees, ACLU alleges in ADA case

This story was originally published on HR Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily HR Dive newsletter. Financial software company Intuit allegedly used AI-backed hiring assessment software provided by third-party vendor HireVue that discriminated against deaf and non-White individuals, the ACLU of Colorado asserted in a March 19 complaint to the Colorado Civil Rights Division and the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The tool at issue, an AI-backed video interview platform, performs worse when evaluating non-White and deaf or hard of hearing speakers, according to the complaint. A deaf and Indigenous Intuit customer service employee was required to use the platform when she applied for a promotion, the complaint claimed. The employee allegedly requested human-generated captioning as an accommodation so she could access interview instructions and questions. Intuit allegedly denied the request and after the interview, rejected her for the promotion due to her communication style, according to the complaint. The ACLU alleged that Intuit's and HireVue's actions violated the Americans with Disabilities Act, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act. In an email statement to HR Dive, HireVue CEO Jeremy Friedman said the complaint 'is entirely without merit and is based on an inaccurate assumption about the technology used in the interview. Intuit did not use a HireVue AI-based assessment.' Friedman added that, 'although HireVue's AI was not used in this instance, our industrial-organizational psychologists and data scientists are continuously engaged in research, including sensitive and important work around race, ability, and other protected statuses.' A spokesperson for Intuit told HR Dive in an email that, 'The allegations in the complaint are entirely without merit. We provide reasonable accommodations to all candidates.' HR managers are familiar with advantages AI-backed hiring tools can provide, including automating tasks like candidate screening and predicting a candidate's success, Stradley Ronon partner Melanie Ronen noted in an October 2024 op-ed to HR Dive. But HR professionals should also be aware of, and work to prevent, algorithmic bias — systematic and repeatable errors in AI-assisted processes that can lead to unintentional discrimination, Ronen stressed. The AI-automated video interview system allegedly used in the Intuit case relies on automated speech recognition systems that may fail to accurately recognize and assess the speech of deaf applicants or the English dialects of Indigenous applicants, the ACLU said. Here, the system allegedly failed to accurately reflect the employee's knowledge, skills and abilities and screened her out, or tended to screen her out, for promotion because of her race and/or disability, the complaint asserted. For employers looking to the EEOC's website for guidance, they won't find it. The agency rescinded documents related to AI and workplace discrimination following President Donald Trump's executive order scrubbing his predecessor's mandate to protect civil rights in AI use and his order rolling back government oversight of AI. However, federal anti-discrimination laws still apply, the Husch Blackwell law firm emphasized in a February blog. In particular, employers remain liable for disparate impact discrimination under Title VII, which can happen when AI disproportionately excludes protected groups, and for disability discrimination under the ADA due to AI systems screening out candidates because of disability-related characteristics, the blog explained. Additionally, 'employers can still be held responsible for AI-related discrimination, even if the tool was developed and implemented by a third-party vendor,' the law firm said. Employers should also keep up-to-date with state and local laws — including those in Colorado and Illinois — set to take effect as the federal government pulls back, Husch Blackwell noted. New York City's law, which took effect in 2023, requires employers to audit automated decision tools for hiring or promotion and notify employees and candidates before using them. To help prevent AI-related unlawful discrimination, HR leaders can take proactive steps, such as performing adverse impact assessments to confirm AI is not operating to favor or exclude groups, Ronen suggested. She also recommended reviewing contracts with vendors to make sure they keep up with the latest AI-related standards. Recommended Reading Applicant says Workday AI bias lawsuit should be nationwide collective action

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