As hiring gets tougher in India, recruiters are turning to AI to find what resumes don’t reveal
MUMBAI: India’s hiring market is not slowing down—but it is getting noisier. New research from LinkedIn suggests that while hiring activity remains 40% above pre-pandemic levels, the task of finding the right candidate has become materially harder. Nearly 74% of recruiters say they now struggle to find qualified talent.
The problem is not a lack of applicants. It is a mismatch between volume and quality. Among recruiters who say hiring has become more difficult, 53% point to a surge in AI-generated applications, while 47% cite persistent shortages in in-demand skills. Almost half—48%—say distinguishing genuine candidates from low-quality or misleading applications has added friction to an already crowded process.
Platform data underscores the scale of the challenge. Applicants per open role in India have more than doubled since 2022. At the same time, 72% of professionals say they are actively job-hunting in 2026, yet 85% admit they feel unprepared to navigate the process. The labour market is busy—but increasingly inefficient.
AI as a filter, not a shortcut
Against this backdrop, recruiters are turning to AI less as an experiment and more as infrastructure. Among Indian recruiters already using AI, 71% say it has helped them uncover candidates with skills they would previously have missed, while 80% say it makes assessing a candidate’s skills easier. More than three-quarters—76%—believe AI is already speeding up hiring.
Adoption is set to deepen. Eight in ten recruiters plan to expand their use of AI in 2026—for sourcing, evaluating applicants and meeting hiring goals. A majority also expect to increase AI use in pre-screening interviews, convinced it will lead to more valuable recruiter–candidate conversations (83%), faster hiring experiences (83%), and better candidate insights (82%).
As Ruchee Anand puts it: "We’re seeing a structural shift in hiring from pedigree and past titles to demonstrated skills and capability. This shift is hard to execute at scale without AI. Used responsibly, AI helps recruiters detect the right skills earlier, reduce screening friction and create a more consistent and fair evaluation process. Our priority at LinkedIn is to build AI tools like Hiring Assistant that serve as a decision-support layer in hiring, so recruiters can find the right talent more quickly and confidently without compromising on quality or candidate experience.”
Transparency moves to the centre
As AI becomes more embedded in hiring, expectations on both sides of the market are changing. Candidates increasingly want to understand how decisions are made. Reflecting this, 50% of recruiters in India say they now feel pressure to explain how AI is used in screening and shortlisting. Trust, it appears, will depend not just on speed, but on clarity.
How LinkedIn is responding
To tackle the twin challenges of speed and quality, LinkedIn is doubling down on AI-led tools designed to move hiring conversations forward.
Salary and Notice Period Filters allow candidates to share expectations privately with recruiters, reducing early-stage friction and unnecessary back-and-forth.
Hiring Assistant, LinkedIn’s AI agent for recruiters, is already being used by companies such as AMD, Aurecon, Chewy, Expedia Group, Fabletics, Jacobs, Siemens and Wipro. Early adopters report reviewing 62% fewer profiles, saving more than four hours per role, and seeing a 69% improvement in InMail acceptance rates. The tool is globally available in English.
LinkedIn Hiring Pro, built for small businesses, helps identify, shortlist and reach out to candidates faster. Based on early usage, nearly 60% of hirers find someone to interview within the first week, while those who save time report over six hours saved each week. New features include AI-powered interview support for initial screenings, a conversational interface to refine hiring needs, and AI-assisted personalized InMails.
Together, the signals are clear. In a labour market flooded with applications but starved of certainty, recruiters are turning to AI not to replace judgement—but to recover it.
Platform data underscores the scale of the challenge. Applicants per open role in India have more than doubled since 2022. At the same time, 72% of professionals say they are actively job-hunting in 2026, yet 85% admit they feel unprepared to navigate the process. The labour market is busy—but increasingly inefficient.
AI as a filter, not a shortcut
Against this backdrop, recruiters are turning to AI less as an experiment and more as infrastructure. Among Indian recruiters already using AI, 71% say it has helped them uncover candidates with skills they would previously have missed, while 80% say it makes assessing a candidate’s skills easier. More than three-quarters—76%—believe AI is already speeding up hiring.
Adoption is set to deepen. Eight in ten recruiters plan to expand their use of AI in 2026—for sourcing, evaluating applicants and meeting hiring goals. A majority also expect to increase AI use in pre-screening interviews, convinced it will lead to more valuable recruiter–candidate conversations (83%), faster hiring experiences (83%), and better candidate insights (82%).
As Ruchee Anand puts it: "We’re seeing a structural shift in hiring from pedigree and past titles to demonstrated skills and capability. This shift is hard to execute at scale without AI. Used responsibly, AI helps recruiters detect the right skills earlier, reduce screening friction and create a more consistent and fair evaluation process. Our priority at LinkedIn is to build AI tools like Hiring Assistant that serve as a decision-support layer in hiring, so recruiters can find the right talent more quickly and confidently without compromising on quality or candidate experience.”
As AI becomes more embedded in hiring, expectations on both sides of the market are changing. Candidates increasingly want to understand how decisions are made. Reflecting this, 50% of recruiters in India say they now feel pressure to explain how AI is used in screening and shortlisting. Trust, it appears, will depend not just on speed, but on clarity.
How LinkedIn is responding
To tackle the twin challenges of speed and quality, LinkedIn is doubling down on AI-led tools designed to move hiring conversations forward.
Salary and Notice Period Filters allow candidates to share expectations privately with recruiters, reducing early-stage friction and unnecessary back-and-forth.
Hiring Assistant, LinkedIn’s AI agent for recruiters, is already being used by companies such as AMD, Aurecon, Chewy, Expedia Group, Fabletics, Jacobs, Siemens and Wipro. Early adopters report reviewing 62% fewer profiles, saving more than four hours per role, and seeing a 69% improvement in InMail acceptance rates. The tool is globally available in English.
LinkedIn Hiring Pro, built for small businesses, helps identify, shortlist and reach out to candidates faster. Based on early usage, nearly 60% of hirers find someone to interview within the first week, while those who save time report over six hours saved each week. New features include AI-powered interview support for initial screenings, a conversational interface to refine hiring needs, and AI-assisted personalized InMails.
Together, the signals are clear. In a labour market flooded with applications but starved of certainty, recruiters are turning to AI not to replace judgement—but to recover it.
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