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The promise of AI in talent acquisition is great. The risks can be too.

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In today’s edition:

It’s not just me data, it’s you

World of HR

Recruit, retain, repeat

—Adam DeRose, Kristen Parisi, Jaimee Kidd

RECRUITMENT & RETENTION

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Francis Scialabba

The promise of AI in talent acquisition (TA) has long been to reduce time to hire and assist recruiters in making better, fairer decisions at scale.

As HR and TA teams deploy more AI tools for sourcing, screening, and interviewing candidates, HR pros are learning that AI can reduce, reinforce, or even obscure bias, depending on how it’s trained and used.

Human recruiters are increasingly making decisions based on insights from AI across the globe. While fewer marquee headlines are addressing how AI tools are impacting biases in hiring, it’s still a critical issue for HR teams and the vendors that are working to deploy this technology.

“When AI first came out, you heard a lot of conversation around bias and hallucination and all that, and now you hear less about those things and more about all the new tech and all the possibilities,” Daniel Chait, Greenhouse cofounder and CEO, said. But he cautioned that just because the online discourse has moved on from concerns around bias or other AI-related risk, doesn’t mean that HR pros and vendors aren’t still thinking about it.

For more on the impact of AI on bias in hiring, keep reading here.—AD

Sponsored By Sana

HR STRATEGY

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Morning Brew

Global engagement is falling, but job optimism is largely strong, according to the State of the Global Workplace report from Gallup.

Employee engagement fell for the second year in a row in 2025, to a post-Covid low of 20%, after peaking at 23% in 2022. Overall, engagement is still up since Gallup began tracking the metric in 2009, when it was just 12%.

Gallup estimates that employers lost an estimated $10 trillion due to low productivity in 2025. “Recent years are a cause for concern,” the report noted. “This is the first time global engagement has dropped for two consecutive years…No region of the world increased engagement in the past year.”

Some workers are more disengaged than others.

For more on the state of employee engagement around the world, keep reading here.—KP

TECH

Headshot of Sam Naficy, a man with a shaved head looking at the camera.

Sam Naficy

Sam Naficy is the CEO of Prodoscore, an employee productivity monitoring software that helps companies understand how work actually gets done across their teams. He’s set to speak at HR Brew’s upcoming summit, Talent 2030 Collective: Recruit, Retain, Repeat, on April 21 about how HR leaders can use people analytics to make sharper talent decisions and build more intentional workforce strategies. Before then, we had a chance to pick his brain about why the AI performance divide is already widening, and what today’s smartest organizations are doing about it.

The following has been edited for length and clarity.

If you zoom out, what’s the biggest shift happening in the talent landscape right now that HR leaders can’t afford to ignore?

The biggest shift is that AI is no longer just a productivity tool; it is a talent differentiator. We are seeing a clear performance gap between employees who use AI consistently and those who do not, and it is widening over time.

For more from our conversation with Naficy, keep reading here.—JK

Together With Gallagher

WORK PERKS

A desktop computer plugged into a green couch.

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top HR reads.

Stat: Nearly one-fourth (22%) of people who have experienced extreme weather events globally have missed work or school as a result. (HR Dive)

Quote: “Given the recent regional tensions, we offered employees the option to temporarily relocate as a precautionary, employee-first measure to provide flexibility and support during a period of uncertainty. As a remote-first organisation, we are well set up to support this kind of flexibility without disruption to our operations.”—A spokesperson for crypto exchange Binance on the company’s decision to let UAE-based workers temporarily relocate during the US-Israeli war with Iran (Bloomberg)

Read: Expensive H-1B visa fees are keeping employers from finding talent in places where few Americans will accept jobs. (the New York Times)

You’re invited: What’s your schedule on May 21? Because leaders and researchers are gathering at the New York Public Library for the 2026 Sana AI Summit. Space is very limited, so register your interest today.*

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