We love AI.
We really do.
It’s built into our systems, it supports our processes, and we use it every single day. In recruitment, ignoring AI would be naïve. It’s fast, it’s clever, and when used properly, it makes everything sharper.
But there’s a question that keeps coming up.
“Is AI going to take over recruitment?”
It usually comes with a slightly nervous laugh. Sometimes curiosity. Sometimes concern. And while it’s a fair question, it also exposes something important about how we think about hiring.
Because if AI really could take over recruitment completely, here’s the honest follow-up question:
Why are we still interviewing people?
The Thought Experiment No One Really Wants
Let’s imagine AI is that good.
No interviews.
No conversations.
No nuance.
You upload a job brief into a system. The computer processes data, experience, skills, patterns, psychometrics, performance predictions and outputs a result:
“You should hire Sally.
She starts on Monday.”
How would that feel?
For most businesses, deeply uncomfortable.
Because hiring isn’t just a transaction. It’s a decision that carries risk, responsibility, culture, chemistry, and long-term impact. You’re not just buying a skill set. You’re inviting someone into a team, into a dynamic, into a future version of your business.
Clients don’t just want to know that Sally can do the job.
They want to know:
- Will she work well with this team?
- Can she grow with the role as it evolves?
- How does she communicate under pressure?
- What motivates her?
- Does she actually want to be here?
Those things don’t live neatly in a dataset.
People Still Hire People
This is the part that often gets lost in AI conversations.
They don’t hire CVs.
They don’t hire algorithms.
They hire humans they believe in.
Interviews still exist because they serve a purpose AI can’t replicate. They allow for instinct, curiosity, challenge, warmth, awkward pauses, unexpected brilliance, and sometimes the realisation that something looks perfect on paper but doesn’t quite land in person.
That human judgement isn’t a flaw in the system.
It is the system.
Where AI Actually Adds Value
None of this is anti-AI. Far from it.
Used properly, AI is brilliant at:
- Speeding up repetitive tasks
- Spotting patterns across large datasets
- Removing some unconscious bias from early screening
- Improving efficiency and consistency
- Supporting better shortlists and insights
It helps recruiters focus their time where it actually matters. Less admin. Less noise. More thinking, listening, and advising.
AI should complement recruitment, not replace it.
The danger isn’t AI taking over recruitment.
The danger is forgetting what recruitment is actually for.
Recruitment Is Emotional (Whether We Like It or Not)
Hiring decisions are emotional. Even in the most data-driven organisations.
There’s risk involved. Trust involved. Hope involved. Pressure involved. A bad hire costs more than money. It affects teams, morale, performance, and momentum.
That’s why conversations matter.
That’s why challenge matters.
That’s why asking why matters.
And that’s why recruiters still exist.
Not as gatekeepers of CVs, but as translators between people and businesses. As sounding boards. As reality-checkers. As humans who understand that what someone can do and what they will do aren’t always the same thing.
The Future Isn’t AI vs Humans
The future isn’t AI replacing recruiters.
It’s recruiters who understand people, supported by technology that removes friction and sharpens judgement.
AI can tell you who matches a role.
Humans work out who belongs in it.
AI can predict performance trends.
Humans sense potential, ambition, and alignment.
AI can process information.
Humans interpret meaning.
And until a computer can sit in a room, read the energy, challenge a candidate’s thinking, spot hesitation, and understand what’s not being said, interviews will still matter.
Because recruitment isn’t just about filling jobs.
It’s about building relationships, futures, and trust.
And that’s something technology can support, but never replace.