loader from loading.io

AI in Hiring: The Promise, Perils, and Unintended Consequences

Hope + Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work

Release Date: 11/07/2024

Witnessed Trust: A PR Crisis, a Pop Star, and a Camera Walk Into a Stadium show art Witnessed Trust: A PR Crisis, a Pop Star, and a Camera Walk Into a Stadium

Hope + Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work

In this episode, I dive into trust through a pop culture moment that became a global case study: the Coldplay kiss cam incident. What looked like celebrity gossip actually opens up bigger conversations about leadership, workplace ethics, public perception, and how we decide who and what to trust. Time-Stamped Highlights 00:00 — I introduce the episode and explain why trust is the real story behind the viral Coldplay kiss cam moment. 02:00 — I recap the incident and how it became a global pop culture and PR event. 05:00 — I break down the Astronomer response and why their...

info_outline
Canadian Perspective on US Politics and Values show art Canadian Perspective on US Politics and Values

Hope + Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work

In this episode of Hope and Possibilities, I share a personal reflection on what’s unfolding in the United States—and why it feels both shocking and familiar to me. I spent nearly 18 years in global financial services, 16 of them working closely with American clients, many based in Minnesota. That experience gave me an inside view of how U.S. systems shape people’s daily lives—and where those systems quietly fail. Long before today’s headlines, I began making deliberate choices to reduce American exposure in my work and center my career in Canada and other global contexts where...

info_outline
Self-Trust and Inner Practices show art Self-Trust and Inner Practices

Hope + Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work

There’s a lot of data showing that trust in governments, institutions, and organizations is declining worldwide. Employers were once considered the last trusted institution—and even that is eroding. As someone who has spent years working independently, I’ve often noticed that these conversations leave out people like us entirely. When you don’t have an employer, trust shows up differently. Stability looks different. And the relationship you have with yourself matters more than most people realize. So I wanted to start there. I talk about what it actually means to trust yourself when...

info_outline
Beyond Hybrid/Remote: Leadership Decisions That Will Define the Next Decade show art Beyond Hybrid/Remote: Leadership Decisions That Will Define the Next Decade

Hope + Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work

In this episode of the Hope and Possibilities Podcast, I talk about what I’m seeing for 2026 and the future of work. My focus is shifting from solely helping companies adopt hybrid and remote work to looking at leadership more broadly. Flexibility, autonomy, and well-being aren’t just perks anymore—they’re core to how people want to work and how organizations succeed. We’ll talk about the pressures around office return mandates, AI, and workforce reduction, and why I don’t buy the narrative that humans are expendable. Instead, leadership in the future is about reinvention,...

info_outline
How I’m Rethinking My LinkedIn Strategy for the Future: Designing for Future Focused Visibility That Feels Good show art How I’m Rethinking My LinkedIn Strategy for the Future: Designing for Future Focused Visibility That Feels Good

Hope + Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work

In this solo episode of Hope and Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work, I’m talking honestly about how LinkedIn and social media are changing, and what that means for how I show up, get found, and build my business. I share how I went from casually using LinkedIn to becoming a LinkedIn Top Voice with a “small but mighty” following, and why the latest algorithm shifts are nudging me to rethink my strategy.​ I get into what’s really going on with discoverability, including how proxy bias can quietly disadvantage women, people of color, trans folks, and anyone who...

info_outline
Let's Talk Thought Leadership and Podcasting in Canada with Amanda Cupido show art Let's Talk Thought Leadership and Podcasting in Canada with Amanda Cupido

Hope + Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work

Amanda Cupido — Founder of Lead Podcasting, author (including "Let's Talk Podcasting for Kids"), experienced broadcaster, keynote speaker, and TEDx presenter. Episode Themes Canadian Podcasting Gaps: Discussion on how most resources are American, and the importance of Amanda’s contribution as an author of uniquely Canadian podcasting resources. Early Audio Influences: Amanda’s lifelong fascination with audio and radio, and her journey into podcasting, contrasted by Nola’s experience with talk radio growing up.​ Podcasting for Kids: Insights from Amanda’s new book...

info_outline
Flexibility, Advocacy, and the Politics of Care show art Flexibility, Advocacy, and the Politics of Care

Hope + Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work

If you say you don’t want to be political, it’s often because the system is already working for you. For those of us who’ve had to fight for flexibility, access, or equity—that’s never been an option.   The Privilege of Silence When someone says, “I don’t do politics,” what they’re really saying is that they’re comfortable with the way things are. That comfort signals that their own ease matters more than the discomfort others experience under the same system. For many people—including me—that kind of silence has never been an option.   Personal Experience...

info_outline
Practical Futurism for Daily Life show art Practical Futurism for Daily Life

Hope + Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work

  Practical Futurism for Daily Life Hope & Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work In this episode, I share how I think about futurism not just as theory, but as something you can actually live. My focus has always been: how do we bring futurism into daily life? How do the choices we make today move us closer to the future we want? I talk about the future-back method I first learned at the Institute for the Future, why noticing matters more than prediction, and how small shifts in attention can help you navigate change with more agency and optimism. In this episode, I...

info_outline
What Got You Here, Won't Get You There show art What Got You Here, Won't Get You There

Hope + Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work

  🎙️ Hope and Possibilities with Nola Simon 🗓️ Episode Title: What Got You Here, Won't Get You There 🧭 Length: ~20 minutes 🎧 Listen wherever you get your podcasts ✨ Episode Summary (from me, Nola): In this episode, I reflect on a concept that’s been showing up in a lot of places in my life and work lately: “What got you here won’t get you there.” It’s a phrase I learned from Marshall Goldsmith, and it’s one that keeps offering new layers of meaning the more I sit with it. I talk about how this idea plays out in leadership — especially the shift from...

info_outline
Presence, Work, and AI: Stories Beyond Location show art Presence, Work, and AI: Stories Beyond Location

Hope + Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work

  🎙️ Episode Title Presence, Work, and AI: Stories Beyond Location 📖 Episode Summary In this episode of Hope & Possibilities: A Love Letter to the Future of Work, I dive into a theory I’ve been working on: our stories about work are deeply tied to presence—but not always in the ways we think. When I look back on my own career, most of my success stories didn’t happen in person. They happened over the phone, on a webinar, or through a screen. I rarely met my clients face-to-face, and yet that work shaped everything I achieved. Along the way, I’ve noticed how much...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

This conversation features an interview with Hilke Schellman, author of "The Algorithm: How AI Decides Who Gets Hired, Monitored, Promoted, Fired, and Why We Need to Fight Back Now." The host, Nola Simon, shares her personal experiences and concerns about AI in hiring processes, which led her to Schellmann's work.

Key points discussed include:

  1. The increasing use of AI in hiring processes, especially for high-turnover positions.
  2. Potential biases and inaccuracies in AI hiring tools, such as:
    • Favoring certain names or keywords unrelated to job performance
    • Misinterpreting data and making incorrect inferences
    • Potentially replicating existing workforce inequities
  3. Lack of transparency and oversight in AI hiring systems, with many companies unaware of how their tools actually make decisions.
  4. The need for thorough testing and scrutiny of AI hiring tools to ensure fairness and effectiveness.
  5. Concerns about how AI might disadvantage certain groups, including immigrants, non-native English speakers, and those with speech differences.
  6. The tension between efficiency in hiring processes and finding the most qualified candidates.
  7. The importance of accountability and responsible use of AI in hiring practices.

 

Key Questions Raised:

- How accurate and fair are AI hiring tools really?
- What data are these systems using to make decisions?
- How can job seekers know if AI is being used to evaluate them?
- Are companies doing enough due diligence on the AI tools they use?
- How can we ensure AI doesn't perpetuate existing biases in hiring?

Action Steps for Employers:

1. Thoroughly test any AI hiring tools before implementation
2. Regularly audit AI systems for biases and inaccuracies  
3. Maintain human oversight and don't rely solely on AI rankings
4. Prioritize finding qualified candidates over speed of hiring
5. Be transparent with candidates about use of AI in hiring process

Action Steps for Job Seekers:

1. Be aware that AI may be used to evaluate your application
2. Focus on clearly communicating relevant skills and experience
3. Consider how AI might interpret information on your resume
4. Prepare for potential AI-powered video interviews
5. Advocate for transparency in hiring processes

Key Takeaways:

- AI hiring tools often have hidden biases and flaws
- More scrutiny and testing of these systems is urgently needed
- Job seekers have little visibility into how they're being evaluated
- Companies need to balance efficiency with fairness and accuracy
- Human oversight remains crucial in hiring processes

Hilke Schellmann, is an Emmy award winning investigative reporter and assistant professor of journalism at New York University.

As a contributor to The Wall Street Journal and The Guardian, Schellmann writes about holding artificial intelligence (AI) accountable. In her book, The Algorithm: How AI Decides Who Gets Hired, Monitored, Promoted, and Fired, And Why We Need To Fight Back (Hachette), she investigates the rise of AI in the world of work. Drawing on exclusive information from whistleblowers, internal documents and real‑world tests, Schellmann discovers that many of the algorithms making high‑stakes decisions are biased, racist, and do more harm than good. 

Her four part investigative podcast and print series on AI and hiring for MIT Technology Review was a finalist for a Webby Award.

Her documentary Outlawed in Pakistan, which played at Sundance and aired on PBS FRONTLINE, was recognized with an Emmy, an Overseas Press Club, and a Cinema for Peace Award amongst others. In her investigation into student loans for VICE on HBO, she uncovered how a spigot of easy money from the federal government is driving up the cost of higher education in the U.S. and is even threatening the country’s international competitiveness. The documentary was named a 2017 finalist for the Peabody Awards.

A former Director of Video Journalism at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism, Schellman also spearheaded video coverage as a Multimedia Reporter for the New York section of The Wall Street Journal. Her work has appeared in several publications including The New York Times, VICE, HBO, PBS, TIME, ARD, ZDF, WNYC, National Geographic, The Guardian, Glamour, and The Atlantic

Schellmann’s work has been generously supported by the Patrick J. McGovern Foundation, MIT Knight Science Fellowship, The Pulitzer Center AI Accountability Network and the NYU Journalism Venture Capital Fund

 

Hilke Schellmann - Author of "The Algorithm" - Hachette Book Group | LinkedIn

THE ALGORITHM • Now On Sale From Hachette Books
Citations:
[1] https://ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws.com/web/direct-files/15878539/8ba935a9-b4e2-401e-9acf-488cf223410e/paste.txt