‘AI Likes to Use AI’: The Narcissistic Hiring Quirk Every Job Seeker Must Know
If you are hunting for a job, your standard human-written resume might already be dead on arrival.
New data reveals a bizarrely human flaw in automated HR systems: AI recruitment tools overwhelmingly prefer resumes written by their own kind. To land an interview in today's market, applicants must learn to play matchmaker between their resume and the employer’s specific AI model.
The AI Mirror Effect
“AI likes to use AI,” says Jonathan Ross, Nvidia’s Chief Software Architect and founder of Groq.
Speaking at the Sohn Investment Conference in New York, Ross explained that corporate recruiting software shares an all-too-human trait: a gravitation toward the familiar. AI scanners consistently favor resumes generated by the exact same Large Language Model (LLM) that the recruiter is using.
To combat this, Ross offers a tactical workaround:
The Strategy: Build multiple versions of your resume using different top-tier models.
The Goal: "Build one resume with Claude, one with ChatGPT... and you’ll have the highest probability of being selected," Ross advises.
The Data Behind the Bias
This isn't just a theory; it is backed by empirical research. A landmark academic study, "AI Self-Preferencing in Algorithmic Hiring," uncovered a massive flaw in automated HR ecosystems.
The Matchmaker Advantage
| Applicant Type | Likelihood of Making the Shortlist |
| Uses the same AI as the recruiter | 23% to 60% More Likely to be selected |
| Uses a different AI model | Significantly lower selection rate |
| Writes the resume manually (Human) | Lowest selection rate (Severe disadvantage) |
The study's authors noted that LLMs consistently suffer from a "narcissistic" bias, creating a system of algorithmic unfairness that heavily penalizes human-written resumes and rewards candidates based purely on their choice of AI tool.
The Automated Gatekeeper is Real
Data from a Resume.org survey highlights just how much power has been handed over to algorithms:
57% of companies now use AI at some stage of the hiring process.
80% of those employers use AI as the very first step to filter applications.
74% of companies authorize their AI agent to reject candidates automatically without any human review.
The Catch
While tailoring your resume using ChatGPT or Claude is a clear competitive advantage, it introduces a brand-new hurdle for job seekers.
As Nvidia's Ross points out, the ultimate challenge has shifted from writing the perfect resume to solving a new puzzle: "You’ve got to figure out which LLM the recruiter’s using."
Does this sound like a hiring landscape you've encountered recently, or are you looking to adapt your own resume using these AI strategies?
