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Recruiting shifts from agencies to algorithms as tech platforms move in

The news: Artificial intelligence is reshaping recruitment economics as employers use AI to screen resumes, rank candidates, and run early interviews internally, reducing reliance on staffing firms like Robert Half, ManpowerGroup, or Randstad.

And now, tech giants are entering the space. 

  • Microsoft’s LinkedIn is building an AI recruiting platform—Hiring Assistant—that will further reduce reliance on third-party recruiters. It’s scheduled for release in September.
  • OpenAI is creating OpenAI Jobs Platform, an AI-driven marketplace to match job seekers with employers that’s positioned as a potential rival to LinkedIn’s recruiting business, per CNBC. Its expected launch date is mid-2026.

Why it’s worth watching: The staffing industry’s landscape could look markedly different as AI-native platforms and tech giants aggressively capture market share from traditional firms. Revenue pressure will increase as their clients cancel contracts or demand lower prices, forcing agencies to cut recruiters to manage costs, per Bloomberg. 

  • Employers are bringing sourcing, screening, and scheduling in-house. AI reduces the need to pay agency markups that often range from 15% to 30% of first-year salary.
  • Tech ecosystems such as LinkedIn, OpenAI, and HR software vendors could absorb recruiting functions end-to-end, compressing talent data, productivity tools, and hiring workflows, per TechCrunch.
  • This means human recruiters will shift toward advisory work: executive search, culture fit evaluation, compensation strategy, and hard-to-fill roles where nuance matters. 

The caveat: AI can speed up recruitment decisions and improve matching efficiency, but it also concentrates decision power inside algorithms that are difficult to audit, explain, or challenge. In addition, bias embedded in training data, incomplete candidate profiles, or flawed ranking signals can quietly filter out qualified applicants at scale

Implications for CMOs: Hiring economics are moving in the same direction as marketing economics, which is toward automation, AI platforms, and software leverage.

Marketing leaders also need visibility into hiring algorithms that shape their teams. Striking the balance between AI efficiency and human judgment will determine whether faster hiring becomes a competitive advantage or a costly source of misaligned talent.

A safe staffing strategy is combining automation’s benefits with human evaluation at critical decision points.

This content is part of EMARKETER’s subscription Briefings, where we pair daily updates with data and analysis from forecasts and research reports. Our Briefings prepare you to start your day informed, to provide critical insights in an important meeting, and to understand the context of what’s happening in your industry. Non-clients can click here to get a demo of our full platform and coverage.

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