In a striking turn of events, two of the world’s leading job platforms , Glassdoor and Indeed, have laid off 1,300 employees, citing a shift toward artificial intelligence. The decision comes from their parent company, Recruit Holdings , which says it’s embracing automation to simplify and speed up the hiring process.
The irony isn’t lost on anyone: the very platforms designed to connect people to jobs are now letting go of people, and replacing them with AI-driven systems.
The humans behind hiring, now out of jobAmong those impacted are employees in research and development, human resources, and people and sustainability teams. Many of them were responsible for shaping inclusive and efficient hiring practices. Their work was centered around understanding human behavior, improving candidate experience , and supporting ethical recruitment.
Now, their roles are being replaced by algorithms trained to scan résumés, rank applicants, and predict hiring outcomes faster and at scale. According to Recruit Holdings CEO Hisayuki “Deko” Idekoba, the company sees AI as a transformative force and is restructuring to stay ahead of this shift.
What AI is already doing in recruitmentFrom resume parsing and candidate ranking to chatbot-driven interviews and predictive performance analytics, AI is no longer just assisting recruiters — it’s replacing them. Platforms like Indeed are deploying tools that automate job matching, while companies worldwide are adopting AI to reduce hiring time, eliminate bias (ironically), and cut costs.
But while efficiency has improved, critics argue that something essential is being lost: the human instinct to look beyond the résumé, to give someone a chance despite what the data says.
A warning sign for the rest of the workforceThe layoffs reflect a broader trend: As AI advances, even white-collar jobs, once considered “safe” from automation, are now vulnerable. It’s not just warehouse workers and delivery drivers feeling the pressure. It's recruiters, analysts, HR managers, and digital professionals.
For students, educators, and young professionals, this moment raises urgent questions:
The irony isn’t lost on anyone: the very platforms designed to connect people to jobs are now letting go of people, and replacing them with AI-driven systems.
The humans behind hiring, now out of jobAmong those impacted are employees in research and development, human resources, and people and sustainability teams. Many of them were responsible for shaping inclusive and efficient hiring practices. Their work was centered around understanding human behavior, improving candidate experience , and supporting ethical recruitment.
Now, their roles are being replaced by algorithms trained to scan résumés, rank applicants, and predict hiring outcomes faster and at scale. According to Recruit Holdings CEO Hisayuki “Deko” Idekoba, the company sees AI as a transformative force and is restructuring to stay ahead of this shift.
What AI is already doing in recruitmentFrom resume parsing and candidate ranking to chatbot-driven interviews and predictive performance analytics, AI is no longer just assisting recruiters — it’s replacing them. Platforms like Indeed are deploying tools that automate job matching, while companies worldwide are adopting AI to reduce hiring time, eliminate bias (ironically), and cut costs.
But while efficiency has improved, critics argue that something essential is being lost: the human instinct to look beyond the résumé, to give someone a chance despite what the data says.
A warning sign for the rest of the workforceThe layoffs reflect a broader trend: As AI advances, even white-collar jobs, once considered “safe” from automation, are now vulnerable. It’s not just warehouse workers and delivery drivers feeling the pressure. It's recruiters, analysts, HR managers, and digital professionals.
For students, educators, and young professionals, this moment raises urgent questions:
- What skills will truly remain relevant?
- How do we compete with systems that never sleep, don’t make mistakes, and scale instantly?
- Will future job interviews be conducted entirely by bots?
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