71% Indian Recruiters Use AI to Uncover Hidden Talent, LinkedIn Report Finds

A new LinkedIn report indicates that 71% of recruiters in India are using artificial intelligence to identify candidates with skills they would have previously overlooked. The technology is helping 80% of recruiters gain better insights into candidate skills and is speeding up the hiring process for 76% of them. However, the surge in AI-generated applications and skill shortages is making hiring more difficult for 74% of recruiters. This has led to increased pressure, with half of the recruiters now needing to explain how AI is used in their screening and shortlisting processes.

Key Points: AI in Hiring: 71% Indian Recruiters Find Hidden Talent

  • 71% of Indian recruiters use AI to find missed talent
  • 80% say AI makes evaluating skills easier
  • 76% report AI speeds up the hiring process
  • 50% face pressure to explain AI use in hiring
2 min read

Over 70 pc Indian recruiters turning to AI to find 'hidden talent': Report

LinkedIn report reveals 71% of Indian recruiters use AI to uncover skilled candidates, speeding up hiring and shifting focus from pedigree to skills.

"We're seeing a structural shift in hiring from pedigree and past titles to demonstrate skills and capability. - Ruchee Anand"

New Delhi, Feb 3

Even as finding the right talent is getting harder, 71 per cent of recruiters in India said that artificial intelligence has helped them uncover candidates with skills they would have previously missed, according to a new report on Tuesday.

The report by professional networking website LinkedIn, based on a survey of 6,554 global HR professionals, noted that recruiters are using AI to spot the right skills and hire faster.

About 80 per cent of recruiters reported that AI makes gaining insight into a candidate's skills easier. More than three-quarters (76 per cent) believe AI is already speeding up hiring.

Around eight in 10 Indian recruiters said they plan to expand their use of AI to support hiring goals, evaluate applicants, and source top talent.

A majority also plan to increase AI use for pre-screening interviews in 2026, believing it will lead to more valuable recruiter-candidate conversations (83 per cent), faster hiring experience (83 per cent), and better candidate insights (82 per cent).

"We're seeing a structural shift in hiring from pedigree and past titles to demonstrate 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," said Ruchee Anand, APAC VP, LinkedIn Talent Solutions.

The research showed that 74 per cent of recruiters now struggle to find qualified candidates, even as hiring activity runs 40 per cent above pre-pandemic levels in India.

This is because recruiters are facing a volume-quality mismatch. Among recruiters who say hiring has become more difficult, over half point to a surge in AI-generated applications (53 per cent), while many cite continued shortages in in-demand skills (47 per cent).

Further, as AI becomes more embedded in hiring, expectations from candidates are rising, too. Professionals increasingly want visibility into how hiring decisions are made, signalling a clear demand for transparency.

Half of recruiters (50 per cent) in India now say they are under pressure to explain how AI is being used in their processes and hiring flow, particularly when it comes to screening and shortlisting candidates.

"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," Anand said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Faster hiring is good, but the article mentions the pressure for transparency. This is crucial. As a recent job seeker, it's frustrating when you get auto-rejected without knowing why. Companies must clearly communicate how the AI is used in screening.
R
Rohit P
The part about AI-generated applications is so true! Everyone is using ChatGPT to write resumes and cover letters now. How will AI distinguish between a candidate who genuinely has skills and one who is just good at prompting an AI? The arms race has begun.
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Sarah B
Working in HR for a tech MNC in Bangalore, I can confirm this shift. The volume of applications is unmanageable manually. AI tools help us shortlist based on project experience and specific tech stacks mentioned, not just keywords. It has definitely improved our quality of hire.
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Vikram M
While the intent is good, I have a respectful criticism. AI is only as good as the data it's trained on. If historical hiring data from India is biased towards certain institutes or backgrounds, the AI might just perpetuate that bias in a new, "algorithmic" way. Need strong safeguards.
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Kavya N
Finally! The obsession with "branded colleges" in India needs to end. There is so much raw talent in state universities and polytechnics. If AI helps find those gems, it will be great for our economy. Skill-based hiring is the future. 💪

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