Applying for jobs has never been easier. That's exactly the problem.
Briefly

Applying for jobs has never been easier. That's exactly the problem.
"His search lasted about eight months. Goyenka estimates that he submitted thousands of applications. 'I got to a point where if I read the company name, I was like, 'Yeah, I've applied to this company,' he told Business Insider. Goyenka tried to follow the advice not to just apply to everything he could find - what recruiters often call 'spray and pray' - and focus on networking. But, he said, that didn't get him very far."
"Making it a cinch to apply for a role sounds like a win. Fewer taps and less time. But that convenience brings a trade-off: It can be harder to stand out. HR departments flooded with résumés can feel compelled to lean on applicant-tracking software. Those systems are designed to help filter out the noise - like candidates who don't bother reading job descriptions or submissions cranked out by AI."
""It's way too easy, and that's not a good thing," tech-industry veteran Jenny Dearborn, who is chief people strategy officer at professional services firm BTS, told Business Insider."
Mihir Goyenka applied to thousands of software-engineering roles over an eight-month job search after graduating with a master's in computer science. He initially tried networking and avoided indiscriminate applying but ultimately pursued many roles, describing the process as a numbers game. LinkedIn reported applications were up more than 45% year-over-year as of May. One-click or low-effort applications lower friction but increase volume, making individual candidates harder to differentiate. HR teams increasingly use applicant-tracking software to filter applications, screening out irrelevant or AI-generated submissions. A slowing job market could further raise competition for roles.
Read at Business Insider
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