Inclusive Interviews Tip #2: Implement AI Screening with Bias Safeguards

What AI Résumé Screening Is and How It Works

 

Think of AI résumé screening as a tireless, highly methodical assistant. It can look at hundreds of applications in minutes, picking out the skills, qualifications and experiences you’ve asked it to find.

The process is fairly straightforward. First, someone defines the role requirements — the essentials and the nice-to-haves.

The AI then scans each résumé, pulling out relevant details: work history, education, certifications, keywords. It matches those details to your criteria and produces a shortlist.

Some tools stop there. Others take it further, running skills tests, analysing language patterns, or even doing automated video screening.

On paper, it sounds flawless. But here’s the catch: the results are only as fair as the data and rules the system is built on.

Without safeguards, AI screening for inclusive interviews can quietly repeat the same biases we have been trying to eliminate.

This inclusive interviews tip shows you how to implement technology that actually supports fair hiring decisions.

Register for our online Inclusive Recruitment course.

Or contact us for tailored support.

Why Speed Without Safeguards Is a Risk

Recruiter reviewing candidate resume using inclusive interviews tip for bias-free screening process.

AI’s biggest advantage is speed. If your team is overwhelmed, it can feel like the solution you have been waiting for.

Yet speed is not always your friend. If the AI’s training data reflects a history of narrow hiring choices, it will faithfully repeat them.

That could mean prioritising candidates from certain schools, industries or regions for no real reason other than “that’s who we hired before”.

Worse still, many systems are opaque. They produce a ranking or score but give no explanation.

You might not even realise bias has crept in until your shortlists start looking less diverse than before. By that point, the damage is done.

Where Bias Creeps In

Bias does not always shout its presence. It hides.

It can be baked into the language of old job ads. It can be tucked away in subjective interview notes. It can even sit in performance reviews where “likeability” overshadowed measurable results.

Sometimes it shows up in things that appear neutral. Distance from the office. Gaps in employment.

Certain résumé formats. These can all act as stand-ins for demographic traits, and the AI cannot tell the difference unless it has been taught to.

Building Safeguards Into AI Screening

The first safeguard is simple. Keep people in charge. Let the AI do the sifting, but have a trained recruiter review every shortlist before anyone is rejected.

Then, test. Not once, not twice — regularly. Look at who applies, and compare that to who the AI advances.

If certain groups keep disappearing between those two points, investigate. It might mean changing a filter, rewriting a requirement, or retraining the system on better data.

Another smart move is to hide identifying details from the profiles that reach interview stage. Names, photos, addresses — all of these invite unconscious bias. Remove them and interviewers are more likely to focus on what matters: skills, potential, and evidence.

Designing AI to Serve the Interview

AI works best when it sets the stage for fair interviews, not when it tries to replace them.

It can create structured profiles that map directly to interview questions and scoring guides. That way, every candidate is judged against the same criteria, not against gut instinct or “someone who feels like a good fit”.

Be open about it. Candidates should know AI is part of the process, what it is looking for, and that a human will make the final decision. Internally, hiring teams should understand the tool well enough to challenge it if something seems off.

Keep Measuring, Keep Adjusting

This is not a “set and forget” tool. Markets change. Candidate behaviour changes. Even the best-configured AI can drift.

Keep checking diversity data from application through to offer acceptance. Watch for unexplained drop-offs. Ask candidates how the process felt. Was it clear? Was it fair?

When something needs adjusting, act quickly. Retrain the model. Update the criteria. Fine-tune the interview process that follows. The aim is not just speed — it is fairness, and giving the right people a genuine chance to shine.

The Bottom Line

AI screening can save time, uncover hidden talent, and bring consistency to hiring. It can also deepen existing inequities if bias safeguards are ignored.

The fix is not complicated. Keep people in control. Audit regularly. Train on diverse data. Make sure AI is supporting inclusive interviews, not undermining them.

In a tight talent market, that balance between efficiency and ethics is what separates the employers people want to work for from the ones they avoid.

Register for our online Inclusive Recruitment course.

Or contact us for tailored support.

Steven Asnicar headshot

Steven Asnicar

Steven is a seasoned executive with over 25 years of experience in corporate leadership, consulting, strategic human resources, and executive search.

As CEO and visionary of DE&I consulting and training firm Diversity Australia, he is at the forefront of revolutionising how organisations across Australia and New Zealand attract, select, and onboard talent through the Inclusive Recruitment Program.

Before founding Diversity Australia, Steven established and successfully led Urban Executive, a specialist executive search and recruitment firm. Through this venture, he gained profound insights into the critical role of DE&I in recruitment and implemented strategies to foster inclusive hiring practices.

Steven has worked closely with Boards, C-suite executives, and teams, offering expertise in leadership development, strategy, succession planning, and executive assessment. His passion for building diverse and inclusive workplaces through innovative, data-driven solutions has positioned him as a thought leader in DE&I, earning over 26,000 followers on his LinkedIn profile, https://au.linkedin.com/in/steven-asnicar.

Steven holds a Masters of International Business specialising in Human Capital Management from Bond University, a Graduate Certificate of Corporate Management from Deakin University, and a Bachelor of Business from the University of Queensland. He is also a graduate of the Global Institute of Directors and a qualified RABQSA Auditor.

Discover more about our key team of consultants and trainers at https://inclusiverecruitment.com.au/our-team.

Inclusive Recruitment Program:

Revolutionising Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Hiring

WE CHAMPION INCLUSION IN RECRUITMENT:The Inclusive Recruitment Program is a service and training offering of Diversity Australia designed to transform the way organisations attract, select, and onboard talent.

We believe that by embracing DE&I in the recruitment process, companies can build dynamic, high-performing teams that drive innovation and success.

EMPOWERING ORGANISATIONS TO BUILD DIVERSE WORKFORCES:Our mission is to redefine the way companies approach recruitment by promoting inclusive hiring practices that prioritise skills, potential, and diversity. We help organisations create a work environment where every individual feels valued, respected, and empowered to succeed.

EXPERIENCE & EXPERTISE YOU CAN TRUST:

  • Led by CEO Steven Asnicar, an experienced executive with expertise in strategic human resources, recruitment, and DE&I;
  • Team of over 10 highly qualified consultants, each holding advanced degrees and bringing vast industry experience to the table;
  • Alignment with Global ISO Diversity and Inclusion Standards, Australian Inclusive Service Standards (ISS), and ASX Corporate Governance Council’s Corporate Governance Principles and Recommendations for DE&I;
  • Training content researched and authored by subject matter experts, validated across our diverse senior team;
  • Proven track record of helping organisations in various industries build diverse, equitable, and inclusive workplaces.

Contact Us Here >

Recent Posts

Our Courses

A professional woman leading an inclusive recruitment training session, speaking to a group of executives in a boardroom setting.

Executive Level Program

The Executive-Level Inclusive Recruitment Program equips leaders to identify and remove bias from key processes like hiring, talent management, succession planning, and performance reviews.

It starts with inclusive leadership foundations, then tackles how bias impacts recruitment decisions, internal promotions, and performance assessments.

The focus is on practical strategies to build fairer, more inclusive systems that recognise talent on merit, not assumptions.

Managers participating in an inclusive recruitment training session, seated around a table in a collaborative office environment.

Manager Level Program

The Manager-Level Inclusive Recruitment Program gives managers the tools to build fair and inclusive team practices across recruitment, development, and performance.

It focuses on how bias can influence everyday decisions, from shortlisting candidates to choosing who gets opportunities to grow. Managers learn how to structure interviews, give fair feedback, and support progression based on merit.

The program helps managers lead diverse teams with consistency, fairness, and accountability.

Company supervisors engaging in an inclusive recruitment program workshop, wearing lanyards and participating in a group discussion.

Supervisor Level Program

The Supervisor-Level Inclusive Recruitment Program helps frontline leaders build fairer, bias-aware practices in everyday decision-making, from hiring to team management.

It focuses on practical skills: making merit-based hiring decisions, supporting team diversity, and recognising leadership potential without defaulting to personal bias.

Supervisors walk away with the tools to lead inclusively and create a more equitable workplace from the ground up.

Inclusive Recruitment Training
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.