Recruit CEO says AI-assisted hiring will drive Indeed's growth

Hisayuki “Deko” Idekoba, CEO of Recruit Holdings, stated that AI-assisted hiring will not threaten Indeed.com's business model but will instead drive profit and sales growth. In a Tokyo interview, he explained how AI helps companies optimize talent acquisition based on candidate pools and applicant numbers.

Hisayuki “Deko” Idekoba leads Indeed.com and its parent company, Tokyo-based Recruit Holdings. He emphasized that companies embracing artificial intelligence for recruiting and hiring will not threaten Indeed.com's business model, as some investors fear, but will instead help drive profit and sales growth at the leading job-search portal.

Idekoba said the business is using AI to help companies optimize their talent-acquisition approach based on the pool of candidates, number of applicants per job, and other factors, while leveraging data flows to set compensation levels or adjust job qualifications. “We’re gradually starting to deploy solutions such as AI agents to customers,” he said in an interview in Tokyo.

For Recruit, this shift reflects a broader transformation in how employers find and evaluate talent, as AI reshapes recruitment worldwide. Automated tools are speeding up candidate screening, cutting hiring costs, and helping businesses respond to labor shortages and changing skill demands.

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Illustration depicting Meta employee under invasive AI surveillance monitoring at work, amid layoffs and staff backlash.
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Meta tracks US employees' computer interactions for AI training amid staff backlash and layoffs

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Meta is deploying software on US employees' work computers to monitor keystrokes, clicks, mouse movements, and screenshots in work apps for AI training data. Internal memos reveal no opt-out option, sparking employee discomfort, as the company invests billions in AI while cutting thousands of jobs.

Several financial firms in Japan plan to join a collaboration between NEC and Anthropic on artificial intelligence. The partnership seeks to enhance financial services for customers and bolster defenses against cyberattacks.

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A majority of chief executives are bracing for job cuts linked to artificial intelligence, new findings indicate.

The Japanese government will roll out Gennai, a generative AI platform built for civil servants, across 39 agencies in a pilot program to improve efficiency.

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Meta has acquired Assured Robot Intelligence (ARI), a startup developing AI for robots targeting high-value labor markets. The deal brings ARI's expertise in robot control and self-learning to Meta's push into humanoid machines. Financial terms were not disclosed.

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