The New AI Chatbot on LinkedIn Is Dedicated to Helping You Land Your Dream Job
AI became a huge help to all of us from school to work and now even landing your dream job. To help premium members with their job search, LinkedIn is rolling out new AI tools. A glitter emoji appears beneath job listings to denote these capabilities, which are driven by OpenAI's technology.
These provide replies in the form of succinct bullet points taken from company profiles and other information on LinkedIn. Users can type inquiries regarding jobs or choose from prewritten ones. Additionally, the automated assistant can respond to more focused inquiries concerning a job posting, corporate benefits, culture, or the sector of the economy the position is in.
LinkedIn is enabling users to extract career advice from posts and articles shared on the platform's feed by providing the same capabilities. The revisions are intended to address the long-standing issue of job hunting, where it can be challenging to understand the expectations of the firm and the probability of receiving an offer.
In the US, the hiring process currently takes 43 days, and the time commitment involved in it causes burnout in many job searchers. According to a CompTIA research from February, almost 50% of job seekers in the tech sector list time commitment as their biggest obstacle.
WIRED evaluated a staff writer's profile using LinkedIn's new AI job search feature, emphasizing abilities that are applicable to various professions. Additionally, the application can expedite the process of deciphering lengthy job advertising, enumerating benefits, dissecting job descriptions, outlining the interview procedure, and responding to follow-up inquiries. Additionally, it might aid in the comprehension of articles and posts shared on LinkedIn feeds.
However, generative AI may result in an applicant flood, putting more pressure on businesses to do their own automated applicant reviews. WIRED and Jobbio have partnered to launch WIRED Hired, a career marketplace exclusively for WIRED readers.
Via Wired.com