Yes, it's come to this: we are being advised on how to succeed at being interviewed by an AI system, even as we understand some enterprising programmer will see this article, feed it into her AI and train it to counter the advice given. What a world we have permitted ourselves in which to become trapped, all in the service of 'efficiency and productivity.' As if.
But it is the one we live in and, frankly, the advise proffered is mostly common sense. The guidance to not sound too robotic nor to keyword stuff is richly ironic, though probably worth noting and, pointing out that, if the system deems you worthy, a human will eventually review your recorded interview is useful. So have at it - or reconsider the opportunity to become a gardener. JL
Ray Smith reports in the Wall Street Journal:
In AI interviews candidates see a screen with a written question and their face in a camera frame with a prompt to respond. Sometimes the question will require a typed-in or multiple-choice response. “AI evaluates delivery, pacing, confidence and clarity, not just content,” so practice: record yourself answering questions. Then review on mute, watching your presence and body language. Next, play the audio-only, to listen for pacing, filler words and clarity. Don’t game it by keyword stuffing. AI systems are smart enough to detect someone being overly robotic.” Since a human will review your interview, look directly at the camera when recording responses in the same way you would look at a human during an in-person interview. AI are trained to note if a candidate is reading from notes or looking up answers. Dress professionally. Check your wifi, turn off phone.