AI is transforming how organisations tackle interview bias, but only when it’s used well.
Here’s what you need to know:
- How to use AI to support structured questioning, assist interviewers with decision-ready data and detect potential bias in real time.
- How organisations can balance AI automation with human judgement to preserve fairness, accountability and candidate experience.
- Where AI can make the most impact for your organisation and how to integrate it without ‘amplifying’ process issues.
Interviews remain one of the most influential and most subjective stages of recruitment. Even with solid ATS-supported screening and workflows in place, many organisations’ bias-reduction techniques fail at interview stage.
Recruiters are increasingly turning to AI tools to transform the interview experience – using them to standardise questions, highlight potential bias in real time and to help teams make more objective, skills-focused decisions.
But the use of AI in recruitment is still highly contentious.
AI is an amplifier – it can make a bad process worse – and recent history has shown that bad AI models can perpetuate and exacerbate bias in recruitment. So, it’s no surprise that many HR teams have concerns about using AI.
But is AI really all bad? AI hiring tools (when trained well) can play a crucial role in eliminating bias from your screening and interviewing process.
The best way forward is to look at where AI assistance will make the most impact. Not every part of your hiring process needs AI. By reviewing and auditing your current process for bias touchpoints before adding AI into the mix, you can take a more considered and strategic approach, monitoring effectiveness and expanding usage as confidence grows.
Let’s start with the problem:
Understanding Interview Bias
Interview bias occurs when a hiring manager or recruiter judges a candidate based on stereotypes, rather than a fair assessment of their skills, merit or experience.
As humans, it’s almost impossible for us not to be biased, either positively, or negatively. It’s part of the human condition. But when it comes to recruitment, unconscious bias can be costly, and organisations can miss out on talent, be exposed to legal risk, or end up with homogenous teams.
From redacted CVs to blind shortlisting, recruiting teams use a wealth of tools and techniques to reduce bias; but until now it’s been hard to manage in the one place it’s most apparent – at interview.
Interview bias presents in many forms, but here are some of the most common:
- Unconscious stereotyping (based on group characteristics, rather than an individual’s qualities): Judging someone by their age, gender, socioeconomic background, ability or race.
- The Halo/Horn effect: Allowing one positive or negative trait to overshadow all other information on the candidate.
- Recency: Favouring the candidates you interviewed most recently (because they’re naturally the freshest in your mind).
- First impressions: We all do it, it’s human nature. But allowing that first impression to colour the rest of the interview is bias.
- Non-verbal bias (body language): Making a judgement based on body language, eye contact or mannerisms rather than interview content. This is especially important to consider when you are interviewing candidates with neurodiversity, who may behave differently or demonstrate physical or vocal tics.
- Similarity bias: Seeing a candidate more favourably if you find you have something in common.
- Contrast bias: Evaluating a candidate unfairly by comparing them to the immediately preceding candidate, rather than against job requirements.
- Confirmation bias: Seeking information that supports an initial pre-conceived opinion about a candidate, while ignoring contrary evidence.