Hiring platform Greenhouse has agreed to acquire Ezra AI Labs, a startup focused on conversational, voice-based AI interviewing. The deal is set to close later this quarter and signals a shift in how talent acquisition (TA) can address the surge of AI-assisted job applications and the cacophony making it harder to discern candidate signals and fill reqs. Applications per recruiter on its platform have jumped 412% since 2023, according to Greenhouse. At the same time, fewer than 7% of applicants receive an interview. Recruiters are facing a daunting challenge: more candidates than ever, but less clarity on who’s actually qualified. “Fundamentally, people want to make the process work. Candidates want jobs. Companies want to make hires, and AI can be a great tool to make all that happen. AI is not the problem in and of itself, but the tools that people have been given haven’t been up to the task,” Greenhouse’s cofounder and CEO, Daniel Chait, said. Candidates can use AI to optimize résumés and applications. Companies can then deploy AI to filter them. The resulting dynamic is noisier, less trustworthy system where strong candidates can be missed entirely. For more on the acquisition, and Greenhouse’s aims to address signal challenges in hiring, keep reading here.—AD | | |
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Right now, you’re probably juggling a whole bunch of solutions for weight, diabetes, obesity, and clinical care—which means you’re paying a lot but getting way less for that price tag. Yeah, not ideal. Noom Health is betting there’s a simpler way to care for your employees: one integrated metabolic health program that supports lasting behavior change and empowers your employees to make healthier choices that stick. Instead of tackling symptoms one by one, Noom Health zeroes in on the habits driving rising claims (think: poor nutrition, low activity, chronic stress). Change the behavior and you’ll get outcomes that actually stick—which means costs are less likely to keep going up. Less complexity, better results. | |
Job openings decreased slightly in March, but hiring went up, suggesting employers are bringing on new workers at a faster clip than they were last year. The number of open jobs fell slightly in March, coming in at 6.9 million, according to the latest Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey. Quits and layoffs were flat, at 3.2 million and 1.9 million, respectively. At the same time, hires went up to 5.6 million, an increase of 655,000 from February, when the hiring rate dipped to 3.1%, the lowest level since April 2020. March’s hiring rebound shows that “employers are becoming more direct and streamlined about the hiring process,” Nicole Bachaud, a labor economist with ZipRecruiter, said. They’re gaining more clarity around what they’re hiring for, how quickly they want to hire, and how many people they want to hire, she explained. For more on what HR needs to know about the latest JOLTS data, keep reading here.—CV | | |
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We’re talking about AI again. But wait! Don’t leave. This isn’t about another tech company. This time we’re focusing on nurses. Around the country, as AI implementation grows in hospitals, so do RNs’ concerns about new technology encroaching on their ability to deliver care. While AI tools have promised saved time, better illness detection, and burnout reduction, the National Nurses United (NNU), a union representing 225,000+ RNs nationwide, insists “hands-on work of caring for other people cannot and should not ever be automated,” according to its Nurses and Patients’ Bill of Rights. So they’re fighting back the way nurses do best: through contract negotiations. Nurses in California and North Carolina spoke with Healthcare Brew about how they’re using their bargaining power to help regulate AI in the hospitals they work in. For more on how nurses are setting rules about AI in their contracts, keep reading on Healthcare Brew.—CM | | |
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Make every dollar count. Choosing the right employee discount program starts with understanding your options. The Buyer’s Guide to Employee Discount Programs from PerkSpot explores how HR leaders can evaluate their current benefits offerings, define goals, and know what to look for in a new program. Read it here. | |
Today’s top HR reads. Stat: Coinbase is eliminating 700 workers, or 14% of its workforce, as the cryptocurrency exchange reorganizes to streamline and speed up decision-making amid the AI transformation. (Business Insider) Quote: “The biggest challenge is not measuring usage, it is proving attribution. Leaders can see where AI is being used and where productivity appears to improve, but isolating AI as the primary driver is hard.”—Sameer Gupta, EY’s Americas financial services AI leader, on the challenges companies face understanding AI use’s impact on productivity (CNBC) Read: The Trump administration is investigating the New York Times for “unlawful discrimination against white men.” The Grey Lady expects a civil rights lawsuit from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission under the leadership from its Trump-installed chair, Andrea Lucas, who has spent much of her tenure redirecting the agency’s resources and investigative efforts on pursuing reverse discrimination and DEI cases. (the New York Times) Show ’em you care: Give your employees the health services they might need, like weight loss, diabetes prevention, and obesity care, with Noom Health’s integrated metabolic health suite for employers. Support lasting behavior change.* *A message from our sponsor. |
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Gas prices are rising at a time when companies have been pushing for more in-office attendance, and employees have been largely dissatisfied with their commutes. Here's what you need to know about HR if this trend continues. Check it out |
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