AI Can Read Your Resume, But It Can’t Judge Your Character
Bots can test your technical skills, but they can't measure who you are.
Recruiters are leaning heavily on AI to screen resumes, automate scheduling, and evaluate hard skills. Simultaneously, candidates are using AI to optimize applications and polish interview responses.
But as automation takes over the hiring pipeline, one traditional strategy is becoming more critical than ever: behavioral interviewing.
1. AI Can't Measure What Really Matters
While AI excels at driving efficiency, it cannot replace human judgment regarding collaboration, behavior, and cultural alignment.
“Technical skills can be tested. Behavior and how someone actually operates within a team is much harder to fake.” — Megan Lance Flanagan, Head of People at Codal
As AI automates routine and technical tasks, interpersonal capabilities are skyrocketing in value. Resumes and automated technical assessments simply no longer tell the whole story.
2. Hard Skills vs. Human Dynamics
Platforms like Codility make it easy to evaluate coding abilities and technical competency. However, technology cannot assess the human variables that dictate long-term success:
Conflict Resolution: How do they handle friction?
Resilience: How do they respond to failure?
Pressure: Can they collaborate effectively under tight deadlines?
Communication: Can they articulate ideas clearly across diverse teams?
Research consistently shows that as automation increases, employers place a premium on emotional intelligence, adaptability, and collaboration. Behavioral interviews uncover these traits by focusing on past actions rather than hypothetical scenarios—asking what a candidate did, not just what they would do.
3. Ditching the Script for Real-Time Reality
Traditional hiring models—reliant on rigid questioning and heavily scripted presentations—are being replaced by interactive, real-world evaluations.
At Codal, hiring for leadership and revenue-generating roles now favors:
Real-time brainstorming sessions
Collaborative whiteboarding
Conversational problem-solving
This approach allows hiring managers to see how a candidate thinks on their feet, navigates uncertainty, and accepts feedback in real time.
The Bottom Line: Bad Culture is a Bottom-Line Risk
Assuming technical excellence guarantees organizational success is a costly mistake. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, a bad hire can cost a company up to 30% of the employee’s first-year earnings in lost productivity, recruitment, and onboarding expenses.
As AI continues to automate the hiring landscape, the companies that win the talent war won't necessarily be the ones using the most technology—they will be the ones that know exactly where human judgment matters most.
