RIP to the resume? Why AI is making every candidate look the same
Estimated read time: 7 minutes
Recruiters are reporting a new pattern in 2024: stacks of applications where nearly every resume reads like it was written by the same person. That's because, increasingly, they were — at least in part. The rise of AI resume builders like Teal, Kickresume, Rezi, and general-purpose tools like ChatGPT has flattened the resume into a near-uniform document, and it's forcing hiring teams to rethink what an "AI resume" (a CV generated, rewritten, or heavily optimized by generative AI tools) actually signals about a candidate.
According to LinkedIn's 2024 Future of Recruiting report, more than half of recruiters say they expect skills-based hiring to overtake traditional resume screening within five years. The shift is already underway — and AI-generated resumes are accelerating it.

How AI resume builders are reshaping applications
Not long ago, creating a strong professional resume required effort. Candidates had to think carefully about how to present their experience, structure achievements, and communicate impact clearly. A well-written resume stood out because it reflected both experience and clarity of thought.
Today, generative AI tools have changed that. Candidates can rewrite bullet points instantly, tailor resumes for every job description, optimize for ATS platforms like Workday and Greenhouse, and generate polished applications in minutes.
At first glance, this seems like progress. Better-written resumes should lead to better hiring outcomes. But when everyone uses the same handful of tools — ChatGPT, Teal, Kickresume — the outputs start to converge. Consider a realistic scenario: a recruiter screening 400 applications for a senior backend engineer role runs a similarity check and finds that 340 use nearly identical phrasing for ownership, scope, and impact bullets. The differentiation that resumes were designed to provide collapses.
Why AI-generated resumes weaken the hiring signal
The purpose of a resume has always been differentiation — helping recruiters quickly decide who moves forward. When AI standardizes how resumes are written, that differentiation weakens.
Two candidates with very different skill levels can now submit equally polished resumes. Both can use similar professional language, present achievements in comparable ways, and match job descriptions almost word for word. From a recruiter's perspective, the problem is no longer finding qualified-looking candidates — it's identifying who is actually qualified.
There is a counter-argument worth naming here: the deeper issue may not be AI resumes at all. Recruiters spend an average of 7.4 seconds reviewing a resume, according to a well-known Ladders eye-tracking study. If resumes were never read carefully in the first place, AI is exposing a screening process that was already broken, not breaking one that worked.

Are resumes becoming obsolete in modern hiring?
Not entirely. Resumes still provide useful context — career progression, work history, exposure to specific tools and industries, and the types of environments a candidate has operated in.
But in many organizations, the role of the resume is changing. It is increasingly a starting point rather than a primary decision-making tool. A resume tells you where someone has worked. It does not reliably tell you how well they can perform.
The shift toward skills-based hiring and AI-driven assessment
As resumes become less reliable, more companies are turning to skills-based hiring, structured interviews, and practical assessments. SHRM research on skills-based hiring indicates a growing share of employers are dropping degree requirements and prioritizing demonstrated capability instead.
What someone can demonstrate often matters more than what they can describe. Here's how hiring teams are adapting.
Reviewing portfolios and real work samples
Recruiters and talent acquisition teams are looking beyond resumes to evaluate candidates through GitHub repositories, live projects, technical assignments, case studies, and design portfolios. Portfolios show how candidates think, how they solve problems, and the depth of their technical and communication ability — they reflect real work, not summaries rewritten by AI tools.
Prioritizing demonstrated skills over written claims
The biggest shift in recruitment is happening at the evaluation level. Hiring is moving from "what does this resume say?" to "what can this candidate actually prove?" In a world where anyone can generate a polished AI resume, demonstrated skills become the real differentiator. This is why more companies are investing in skills assessments, structured interviews, technical evaluations, and job simulations. Specifically, that means moving timed coding tests, scenario-based questions, and structured rubrics earlier in the funnel — before the recruiter screen, not after.
Where AI fits into hiring the right way
AI is not only creating the resume homogenization problem — it is also helping solve it. While candidates use AI to optimize resumes, hiring teams can use AI-driven interview platforms to evaluate skills more consistently at scale.
This is where HackerEarth's OnScreen AI Interviewer fits in. OnScreen is an AI-powered interview tool — meaning it conducts structured interview conversations using a deterministic rubric trained on a defined library of technical and non-technical questions, and is bounded to interview evaluation rather than general candidate scoring or sourcing.
OnScreen shifts hiring focus from what candidates say to how they perform. It creates two-way interview conversations using lifelike video avatars, so candidates engage in structured interactions rather than static screening questions. Every interview follows a deterministic framework, ensuring consistent and comparable evaluations across all candidates. It also includes KYC-grade identity verification and built-in proctoring — directly relevant in an era when AI-generated CVs and candidate misrepresentation are rising concerns.
As one HackerEarth customer, Discover Dollar Inc., put it: "HackerEarth's OnScreen AI Interviewer has significantly reduced our screening time while improving the quality of candidates moving forward in the hiring process."
Compared with human-led phone screens, OnScreen applies the same rubric to every candidate, producing evaluations that don't vary by interviewer mood, fatigue, or time of day. It is not a replacement for final-round judgment — it is a more consistent first-round filter.
Where AI interviews and skills-based hiring fall short
AI interview platforms are not a universal answer. They tend to work best for roles where capability can be observed through structured tasks — engineering, data, customer support, and similar functions. They are a weaker fit for senior executive hiring, where judgment, leadership history, and stakeholder context matter more than any single interview signal. They also struggle with highly creative roles and positions where contextual decision-making and long-arc strategic thinking are the core of the job.
There are real candidate-side trade-offs as well. Avatar-based interviews can introduce bias against candidates with strong accents, non-native English speakers, or candidates with disabilities affecting speech or vision — risks that responsible deployments need to mitigate through accommodations and human review. Some candidates also report that AI interviews feel impersonal compared with a live conversation, which can affect candidate experience and offer-acceptance rates. Hiring teams adopting these tools should pair them with human interviewers for later rounds and provide clear accommodations on request.
Is this the end of the resume?
Not completely. But in many hiring processes, the traditional resume is fading as the strongest signal. It is becoming a first touchpoint rather than a final decision-making factor — closer to a formality than a true indicator of capability. The hiring decisions that matter most will increasingly be made on what candidates can demonstrate, not what they can describe.
Frequently asked questions
Are AI resumes hurting job seekers?
AI resumes can help candidates pass initial ATS filters, but they may hurt differentiation at the human review stage. When most applicants use similar tools, polished phrasing stops being a competitive advantage and recruiters shift weight toward portfolios, assessments, and interviews.
How do companies detect AI-written resumes?
Some companies use similarity-detection tools and AI-text classifiers, but most identify AI-generated resumes indirectly — through patterns like near-identical phrasing across applications, generic accomplishment statements, or mismatches between resume claims and interview performance. Structured assessments are a more reliable signal than detection tools.
What is skills-based hiring?
Skills-based hiring is a recruiting approach that evaluates candidates primarily on demonstrated abilities — through assessments, work samples, or structured interviews — rather than on credentials like degrees or job titles. It is associated with broader candidate pools and, in some studies, better retention.
Will resumes become obsolete?
Resumes are unlikely to disappear entirely, but their role is narrowing. In many hiring funnels they are shifting from a primary screening tool to a contextual document, with assessments and structured interviews carrying more weight in the decision.
Can AI interview platforms replace human interviewers?
No. AI interview platforms like OnScreen are best used for early-stage structured screening, not for final hiring decisions. Senior, leadership, and highly contextual roles still require human judgment, and human review is important for handling accommodations and edge cases.
Next steps
If your team is dealing with rising application volumes and lookalike resumes, see how structured AI interviews can sharpen your top-of-funnel signal. Request a demo of HackerEarth's OnScreen AI Interviewer to see how it works on a role you're actively hiring for.










