AI in HR : A Powerful Co-Pilot… But Never The Pilot

by | Mar 30, 2026 | Career tips, News, Recruitment Insights | 0 comments

Artificial intelligence is gradually transforming the field of human resources. From recruitment to performance management, training, and employee engagement, AI-driven tools are becoming increasingly common in HR practices.

However, an essential question remains : how far can we trust AI when it comes to HR decisions ? During a conference dedicated to the use of AI in human resources, one key idea emerged : AI should support human decision-making, but it should never replace human judgment. 

 AI : A Powerful but Imperfect Tool

One of the most common mistakes is assuming that AI provides fully reliable answers. In reality, AI models operate based on statistical prediction rather than factual verification.

Studies have shown that some AI models provide incorrect web references in nearly 60% of cases. Despite this, many users tend to trust the generated answers without verifying the informations. This phenomenon is often referred to as AI hallucination : when the system does not know the answer, it may generate a plausible but incorrect response instead of acknowledging uncertainty. 

To reduce this risk, professionals should : 

  • systematically verify AI-generated information
  • frame prompts carefully
  • ask AI to challenge or critique the reasoning 

For example, asking AI to “act as a critical expert” or “review the analysis” can often lead to more accurate results. 

 

Recruitment : Transforming Sourcing Not Decision-Making

In recruitment, AI can significantly improve several steps of the hiring process. 

It can be used to :

  • analyse large volumes of CVs
  • identify key skills 
  • generate job descriptions 
  • automate certain candidate communications

However, delegating final hiring decisions to AI remains risky. AI systems are trained on historical data and may therefore reproduce existing biases. A well-known example involved a recruitment tool developed by Amazon that unintentionally favoured male candidates for technical roles because historical hiring data contained more male profiles. 

AI systems may therefore reinforce biases related to : 

  • gender
  • age 
  • origin 
  • educational background

To limit these risks, organisations should ensure that only relevant information is provided to the AI, such as skills and professional experience. 

 

Performance Management : Assistance Rather Than Evaluation

The same principle applies to performance management : AI should assist managers, not replace their judgment. Automatically assigning performance scores to employees can lead to several issues :

  • loss of trust in evaluation systems
  • perceptions of unfairness
  • decisions based on incomplete analysis

AI only processes textual or numerical data. It cannot fully understand : 

  • team dynamics
  • individual effort 
  • organisational context 

However, AI can be extremely useful for analysing large volumes of feedback. For instance, it can detect early warning signals related to psychosocial risks, such as recurring mentions of workload or stress in employee comments. These insights should always be considered alerts rather than definitive conclusions. 

Training and Skills Development  

AI also opens new opportunities in the field of learning and development. It can organisations :

  • identify training trends
  • summarise long educational content 
  • recommend learning resources 
  • map internal competencies

This allows HR teams to save considerable time when analysing learning needs and resources. However, letting AI determine training priorities or budgets can be problematic, as it often relies heavily on past data and may not reflect future strategic needs

 

The Key Principle : Co-Pilot, Not Pilot

Ultimately, the most effective way to integrate AI into HR is to consider it as a co-pilot rather than the pilot. AI can :

  • accelerate data analysis
  • automate repetitive tasks
  • support strategic thinking

But human responsibility must always remain central. In areas as sensitive as recruitment, performance evaluation, and employee well-being, human judgment, empathy, and contextual understanding remain irreplaceable. 

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