AI HR Daily by OVI

The HR Chatbot Jungle: 8 AI Platforms That Know What They're Doing

1 h 0 min · 7. juli 2026
episode The HR Chatbot Jungle: 8 AI Platforms That Know What They're Doing cover

Description

AI adoption in HR doubled in a single year — from 26% to 43%. But 'AI chatbot' has become a catch-all label for wildly different tools. This episode cuts through the noise with a practical buyer's guide to the top AI candidate engagement platforms in 2026. From Paradox's Olivia — which helped Chipotle hire 75% faster — to OVI's all-in-one chat-native ATS with built-in AI sourcing and audio screening, we break down which platform actually fits your hiring context. Whether you're running high-volume hourly hiring, building an enterprise talent experience, or scaling a growth-stage startup, there's a very different answer. We map eight platforms by use case: OVI, Paradox, Humanly, Phenom, HireVue, XOR, Eightfold AI, and SenseHQ. And we share the three questions every HR buyer needs to answer before choosing a platform. Brought to you by OVI — the chat-native ATS with AI sourcing and audio screening built in. Plans start at $99/month. Learn more at ovi-me.com.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the AI HR Daily by OVI community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

496 episodes

episode $5.5 Trillion at Stake: The AI Workforce Planning Playbook and Its Hard Limits artwork

$5.5 Trillion at Stake: The AI Workforce Planning Playbook and Its Hard Limits

The World Economic Forum says 22% of jobs will be disrupted by 2030. IDC estimates $5.5 trillion in productivity sits unrealized because companies can't close their skills gaps fast enough. And McKinsey data shows organizations using AI workforce management tools are already seeing up to a 25% productivity boost. The race is on — but what does winning actually look like? In this episode, we walk through three enterprise AI deployments rewriting the workforce planning playbook: Schneider Electric's AI talent marketplace that unlocked 360,000 hours of hidden capacity and $15 million in savings. Walmart's AI scheduling system that cut labor costs 15% across thousands of stores. And IBM's skills inference platform that saved employees 3.9 million hours in a single year while slashing HR operational costs by 40%. But here's the critical counterweight: there are places AI must not go alone. Final hiring decisions. Promotion calls. Layoff planning. New York City already mandates bias audits for automated hiring tools. The EU AI Act classifies recruitment AI as high-risk. One biased model at enterprise scale can harm thousands of people simultaneously — and the legal and human costs are enormous. The bottom line: organizations building governance frameworks now, auditing their data, and doing the change management work will hold structural advantages when agentic AI transforms static headcount plans into real-time talent orchestration by 2027. Waiting isn't neutral — it's falling behind.

18. juli 20261 h 0 min
episode 663,000 Jobs: Inside the World's Largest AI Hiring Operation artwork

663,000 Jobs: Inside the World's Largest AI Hiring Operation

Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 isn't just a policy document — it's the world's largest active construction and hiring operation. Three gigaprojects — Red Sea Global, Qiddiya, and Diriyah — need 663,000 additional skilled workers before the end of the decade, and internal HR teams were never built to move that fast. In this episode, we break down the AI infrastructure powering Vision 2030 recruitment: multilingual ATS platforms that screen CVs in Arabic, English, Hindi, Urdu, Tagalog and more; RPO firms cutting hiring timelines nearly in half; and real-time Saudization compliance tracking that flags whether a new hiring wave is about to push a company out of its required national quota band — before the contracts are even signed. The numbers are striking: 87% of Saudi companies now use AI in recruitment, the Kingdom's AI HR market has hit $330 million, and RPO-led pipelines are delivering a 35% reduction in cost-per-hire. This isn't experimentation — it's national economic strategy running through an ATS. For HR leaders building high-volume or multilingual hiring pipelines anywhere in the world, Saudi Arabia's gigaproject model is a live case study in what happens when recruiting velocity becomes a matter of strategic necessity. We cover what the infrastructure looks like, how the three projects handle competing for the same specialist talent pools, and what the takeaway is for teams hiring at scale.

Yesterday1 h 0 min
episode Live or Async? How AI Is Splitting the Interview Intelligence Market in 2026 artwork

Live or Async? How AI Is Splitting the Interview Intelligence Market in 2026

The AI interview intelligence market just hit $2.22 billion — and it's split into two very different product categories solving two very different hiring problems. In this episode, we break down exactly what separates live interview intelligence platforms like Metaview and BrightHire from async screening tools like Willo and HireVue, and help you figure out which one actually solves your bottleneck. Here's the stat that sets the stage: 22% of job seekers now admit to using AI live during interviews. Not before, not after — while they're talking to your team. That's accelerating demand for a whole new class of verification and assessment tools, and the platforms moving fastest are the ones treating candidate authenticity as a product feature, not just a policy. We walk through the five leading platforms — Metaview, BrightHire, Willo, HireVue, and VidCruiter — covering pricing, integrations, compliance features, and what kind of hiring team each one is actually built for. Then we give you the simple decision framework: if your problem is interview quality and consistency, go live intelligence. If your problem is volume and scheduling friction, go async. Budget, team size, compliance requirements, and global hiring footprint all factor in — and the price range is wilder than you might expect, from a free Metaview tier to $200,000-a-year HireVue enterprise contracts. Tune in to find out which end of that spectrum is right for you.

Yesterday1 h 0 min
episode 83% Plan AI Hiring Tools. Almost None Know If They Work. artwork

83% Plan AI Hiring Tools. Almost None Know If They Work.

Most companies planning to use AI for resume screening have never seen peer-reviewed evidence that their tools actually work — or that they aren't quietly discriminating. In this episode, we break down three converging forces that should be on every HR leader's radar right now. First: New York's Local Law 144 enforcement is effectively broken. A December 2025 audit found the city's enforcement agency flagged just one company as non-compliant out of 32 — while independent auditors found seventeen. And 75% of calls to the enforcement hotline were improperly routed. The law exists. The enforcement doesn't. Second: Mobley v. Workday is proceeding as a class action. The lawsuit alleges Workday's AI platform systematically filtered out candidates based on age, race, and disability — and in February 2026, the court authorised class notice. No liability yet, but this is a signal every HR tech buyer should read. Third: Brookings research shows most AI hiring vendors have never published peer-reviewed validity evidence. Not academic journals. Just vendor white papers. That's not validation — it's marketing. We close with three questions every HR leader should ask their AI vendor before rolling out any screening tool, and what trustworthy AI hiring actually looks like in practice: auditability, transparency, and demonstrated validity — not perfection.

Yesterday1 h 0 min
episode Does AI Actually Know Who's Worth Hiring? 2026 Research Has Answers artwork

Does AI Actually Know Who's Worth Hiring? 2026 Research Has Answers

The research on AI-scored interviews is finally catching up to the hype — and the results are more nuanced than the vendors want you to know. This episode digs into what the latest 2026 studies actually show about whether AI interview scores predict quality of hire, where the technology holds up, and where it quietly fails. Some findings will surprise you. Structured AI scoring shows real predictive validity in certain roles — but it crumbles when the job is ambiguous, the rubric is weak, or the model hasn't been trained on your specific context. And the bias question? Still open, depending heavily on how the tool was built and what it was optimized for. We also look at how forward-thinking HR teams are using AI interview intelligence not to replace human judgment, but to make it sharper — flagging inconsistencies, surfacing blind spots, and helping interviewers ask better follow-up questions. That's a fundamentally different use case than fully automated scoring. If you're evaluating interview AI tools or defending your current process to leadership, this episode gives you the research-backed framing to cut through the noise.

Yesterday1 h 0 min