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How Values-Based Recruitment In Tech Solves Hiring Struggles

How Values-Based Recruitment In Tech Solves Hiring Struggles

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March 17, 2023
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You won’t attract most candidates – no matter how hard you sell or how much employer branding content you drown them in (even if it’s dipped in caramel chocolate).

They’re just not your piece of cake.

If candidates aren’t impatiently picking up what you’re throwing down, know this:

You don’t have a funnel problem.

Or a reputation problem.

You don’t have a recruiting strategy problem.

No, it’s not a candidate outreach problem either.

You don’t have a candidate experience problem.

Neither do you have a talent market or competition problem.

These are all symptoms of a bigger problem.

The problem is a threatening, scary, bleak (but easily fixable) VALUES-SHAPED crater in your recruiting. A crater you can turn into the hottest destination for top talent – yes, even if you work at the most boring, basic company on the planet.

But you have to be ready to show the real company…by embracing your company’s unique values and communicating them. By adopting values-based recruitment.

What is values-based recruitment?

Definition of Values-Based Recruitment

Values-based recruitment is a recruitment strategy that focuses on matching the values of the current and envisioned company culture with the values of the applicants. This strategy turns communication in recruiting upside down. Instead of evaluating the values in the later stages of the recruiting process, the organization communicates its values starting at the first touch point with candidates. That means job profiles turn into values-ambassadors of the company and create meaning for candidates.

Advantages of value-based recruitment strategy

A values-based recruitment strategy is a method of hiring that focuses on finding candidates who share the same values as the company. This can be done by incorporating values into the job description, interview process, and pre-employment assessments.

There are many advantages to using a values-based recruitment strategy, including:

Improved employee engagement: Employees who share the same values as their company are more likely to be engaged in their work. This is because they feel like they are part of something bigger than themselves and that their values are aligned with the company’s mission.

Reduced employee turnover: Employees who are happy and engaged in their work are less likely to leave. This can save companies a lot of money in recruiting and training costs.
Stronger company culture: A values-based recruitment strategy can help to create a strong company culture. This is because it brings together employees who share the same beliefs and values. A strong company culture can lead to a number of benefits, such as increased productivity, improved customer service, and a more positive work environment.

Better decision-making: Employees who share the same values are more likely to make decisions that are in the best interests of the company. This is because they are all working towards the same goals and objectives.

Enhanced employer brand: A values-based recruitment strategy can help to enhance a company’s employer brand. This is because it shows potential candidates that the company is committed to its values and that it is a good place to work.

Process of setting up a value-based recruitment strategy

Here are some tips for implementing a values-based recruitment strategy:

  1. Start by defining your company’s values. What are the most important things to your company? What kind of work environment do you want to create? Once you have a clear understanding of your values, you can start to incorporate them into your recruitment process.
  2. Include your values in your job descriptions. This will help potential candidates to understand what your company is looking for and whether or not they would be a good fit.
  3. Use pre-employment assessments to screen for values. There are a number of pre-employment assessments that can be used to assess a candidate’s values. This can help you to identify candidates who are a good fit for your company culture.
  4. If you’re working with external recruitment agencies, ensure they understand and align with your company’s values so they can pre-screen candidates effectively.
  5. Ask values-based questions during interviews. Develop structured questionnaires or surveys that evaluate a candidate’s alignment with company values. Use these during the application or interview process. This will help you to get to know the candidate’s values and how they align with your company’s values.
  6. Frame questions that prompt candidates to describe past situations where their values influenced their actions. For instance, “Describe a time when you had to make a difficult decision that tested your core values.”
  7. Present candidates with hypothetical, but realistic, job-related scenarios that challenge their values. Observe their problem-solving approach and decision-making process.
  8. When checking references, ask specific questions about the candidate’s values and how they’ve manifested in previous roles.
  9. Introduce new hires to the company’s values from day one. Use onboarding sessions to further assess their alignment and adaptability.

Also read: What Leadership Means To Us At HackerEarth

Values-based campaigns excel

5-Step Checklist For Creating A Values-Based Recruitment Plan

Data best reveals the power of this strategy. We analyzed LinkedIn outreach campaigns with the goal to attract senior talent for HR, marketing, legal, and IT roles. On one side, we looked at best practice campaigns. You know the ones that everyone is doing.

On the other side, we had campaigns that communicated values first. These values-based campaigns achieved 20 times higher application rates than best-practice campaigns. From 100 prospects, more than 30 responded, and of those more than 20 applied. But they did much more than that.

Even people that were happy with their current employer applied (“I was not looking for a job, my application just happened”).

There were people that applied that you never see in the open job market. The top 0.1% of talent with CVs that leave you shocked in awe, make you wonder if conspiracy theorists are right. Maybe aliens are amongst us after all, because no human being is able to achieve these results.

Candidates were so excited about the possibility of landing these jobs. They even took the time to write 1 to 2 pages about what they need to be productive and happy as the first step of their application.

The magnetic effect of those values-based campaigns was so strong that top candidates even kept applying 6 months later. They knew that the chance to get a job advertised 2 seasons ago was 1/∞ (“I know when you divide 1 by infinity the universe might collapse, but I had to risk it because your company is what I have been looking for all my work life”).

Aside from communicating values first, how were the values-based recruitment campaigns different?

  1. The job profiles were designed like landing pages, not like boring requirement lists
  2. The value proposition of the job profiles was derived from the company’s culture
  3. The LinkedIn messages were very concise (3-5 lines maximum) and had a non-intrusive tone of voice

Before we can understand how values-based recruitment works, we need to understand how the world has changed.

Also read: Go Beyond Compensation – 10 Employee Benefits for Developers

Why aren’t you happy?

Quiet quitters” make up at least 50% of the U.S. workforce. And the number is increasing, especially among younger generations.

But what’s behind this? Think about all the desolate and gray workplaces that exist. Those employers believe that a solid paycheck satisfies all work needs (Why aren’t you happy? You’re getting paid on time).

At these places, the individuality of an employee isn’t what counts. They force employees to fit into a structure designed by last century’s mechanic management theories. There, employees sit out time to wait for their paychecks. If they have not found their best friend in the organization with whom they can make fun of bad leaders, they suffer in silence or leave the company.

Why are you so lazy?

Let me tell you: there are two fundamental ways of looking at humans. You can assume that everyone is lazy by nature. That’s wrong as it’s damaging. It leads to a management style of control and a culture of distrust. The cost of control is exceptionally high. Think about all the surveillance systems you need to install and manage!

Management of control replaces intrinsic motivation with extrinsic “carrots and sticks”-motivation. People only jump as high as they need to avoid the stick or to catch the carrot.

Today, many companies are complaining that millennials are lazy. They assume that millennials tend to speak out more about their needs than previous generations, so they want the benefits without working.

That’s absurd. Actually, they are doing exactly the opposite. By telling you what they need to be sustainably productive and innovative in a world of digital overwhelm. They help you to create a work environment in which productivity can flourish.

Older generations communicate their needs less because their upbringing left them believing they have no right to ask for individual needs. As businesses set the rules of the game. But that doesn’t mean that they don’t have needs. When you adopt values-based recruitment, you’ll see that people of all ages are excited to apply.

Also read: 10 Key Employee Retention Strategies In Tech

Define your blue talent ocean with values-based recruitment

Simon Sinek explains that people don’t buy what you do. They buy why you do it. That’s the foundation of why Apple attracts loyal customers and is one of the most valuable companies on the planet. The same applies to recruiting and talent marketing. People don’t apply for tasks. They apply for why they should perform them.

In other words, people crave to contribute to something larger than themselves. They want to be with people who share their beliefs and feel a sense of belonging. Your people want a workplace where they are NOT treated as exchangeable machine parts. Recognize and embrace their weird individuality. The people want to be seen, heard, understood, and respected. They want to enrich their lives with meaning.

This is great news for you. Because if you can turn your recruiting activities into “values windows” of your company, you’ll stop fishing in the pond of meaninglessness like everyone else. You’ll be fishing in the blue ocean of meaning.

It’s a market that you create with your identity. And if on top, you can make people feel appreciated and valued, you’re going to drown in applications. Then you’re offering a way of life, a committed community, a home, a destination. This comprehensive guide on values-based hiring can help you walk the first steps.

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March 17, 2023
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3 min read
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What It Takes to Keep Gen Z Engaged and Growing at Work

What It Takes to Keep Gen Z Engaged and Growing at Work

Engaging Gen Z employees is no longer an HR checkbox. It's a competitive advantage.

Companies that get this right aren’t just filling roles. They’re building future-ready teams, deepening loyalty, and winning the talent market before competitors even realize they’re losing it.

Why Gen Z is Rewriting the Rules

Gen Z didn’t just enter the workforce. They arrived with a different operating system.

  • They’ve grown up with instant access, real-time feedback, and limitless choice. When work feels slow, rigid, or disconnected, they don’t wait it out. They move on. Retention becomes a live problem, not a future one.
  • They expect technology to be intuitive and fast, communication to be direct and low-friction, and their employer to reflect values in daily action, not just annual reports.

The consequence: Outdated systems and poor employee experiences don’t just frustrate Gen Z. They accelerate attrition.

Millennials vs Gen Z: Similar Generation, Different Expectations

These two cohorts are often grouped together. They shouldn’t be.

The distinction matters because solutions designed for Millennials often fall flat for Gen Z. Understanding who you’re designing for is where effective engagement strategy begins.

Gen Z’s Relationship with Loyalty

Loyalty, for Gen Z, is earned, not assumed.

  • They challenge outdated processes and push for tech-enabled workflows.
  • They constantly evaluate whether their current role offers the growth, flexibility, and purpose they need. If it doesn’t, they start looking elsewhere.

Key insight: This isn’t disloyalty. It’s clarity about what they want. Organizations that align experiences with these expectations gain a competitive edge.

  • High turnover is the cost of ignoring this.
  • Stronger teams are the reward for getting it right.

What Actually Works

1. Rethink Workplace Technology

  • Outdated tools may be invisible to older employees, but Gen Z sees them immediately.
  • Modern HR tech and collaboration platforms improve efficiency and signal investment in people.
  • Invest in tools that reduce friction and enhance daily experience, not just track performance.

2. Flexibility with Clear Accountability

  • Gen Z values autonomy, but also needs clarity to thrive.
  • Hybrid and remote models work when paired with well-defined goals and explicit ownership.
  • Focus on outcomes, not hours. Autonomy with accountability is a combination Gen Z respects.

3. Continuous Feedback, Not Annual Reviews

  • Annual performance reviews feel outdated. Gen Z expects real-time feedback loops.
  • Frequent, actionable feedback helps employees improve faster and signals that their growth matters.
  • Make feedback a weekly habit, not a twice-yearly event.

4. Make Growth Visible

  • If career paths aren’t clear, Gen Z won’t wait. They’ll look elsewhere.
  • Internal mobility, structured learning paths, and reskilling opportunities signal future potential.
  • Invest in learning and development and make career trajectories explicit.

5. Build Real Belonging

  • Inclusion must show up in daily interactions, not just company values documents.
  • Inclusive environments where diverse perspectives are genuinely sought produce better decisions and stronger engagement.
  • Gen Z quickly notices when DEI is performative. Build it into everyday interactions.

6. Connect Work to Purpose

  • Gen Z wants to see how their work matters in a direct, traceable way.
  • Linking individual roles to tangible business outcomes increases ownership and engagement.
  • Purpose-driven work isn’t a perk. It’s a retention strategy.

7. Prioritize Well-Being

  • Burnout is a performance problem before it becomes attrition.
  • Mental health support, sustainable workloads, and genuine flexibility reduce stress and sustain engagement.
  • Policies must be real in practice. Gaps erode trust.

How to Attract Gen Z from the Start

Job Descriptions That Tell the Truth

  • Generic postings don’t convert Gen Z candidates. They want specifics: remote or hybrid expectations, real growth opportunities, and culture in practice.
  • Transparent job descriptions attract better-fit candidates and reduce early attrition.

Skills Over Experience

  • Gen Z and organizations hiring them increasingly value potential over tenure.
  • Skills-based hiring opens access to a broader, more diverse talent pool and builds teams equipped for change.
  • Hire for capability and future-readiness, not just years on a resume.

The Bottom Line

Retaining Gen Z isn’t about perks. It’s about rethinking the employee experience from the ground up.

  • Flexibility without accountability fails.
  • Purpose without visibility is hollow.
  • Growth that isn’t visible or structured drives attrition faster than most organizations realize.

The payoff: When organizations combine the right technology, real flexibility, continuous feedback, visible growth paths, and genuine inclusion:

  • Gen Z doesn’t just stay. They perform at a higher level.
  • Adaptive, future-forward thinking compounds over time.

That’s what separates organizations that thrive in today’s talent market from those constantly replacing people who left for somewhere better.

AI Tools for HR Managers in 2026: What's Actually Working (And What Isn't)

AI Tools for HR Managers in 2026: What's Actually Working (And What Isn't)

The current state of AI adoption in HR
88% of HR leaders say their organizations have not yet realized significant business value from AI. That number is striking, given that 91% of CHROs now rank AI as their single top priority. The gap is not a technology problem it is an adoption and strategy problem. Most HR teams have added AI to their workflows in some form, but very few have moved past experimentation into real, measurable impact.

This guide is for HR managers who want to change that. Not a list of tools to bookmark and forget, but a clear-eyed look at where AI is delivering results in 2026, what separates the tools that work from the ones that don't, and how to actually use them.

The adoption gap that most HR leaders aren't talking about

AI is present but underutilized.
According to the SHRM State of AI in HR 2026 report, 62% of organizations use AI somewhere in their business. But only 11% have embedded AI into daily workflows, defined as more than 60% of employees using it daily. That is a significant divide and explains why so many AI investments feel underwhelming.

Managers experiment more than employees.
A July 2025 Gartner survey of 2,986 employees found that 46% of managers are experimenting with AI, compared to just 26% of employees. Most organizations encourage exploration but fail to provide the structure, expectations, or training needed to make AI stick. Only 7% of organizations give employees guidance on how to use the time AI saves them.

The result: wasted potential.
Workforces have access to powerful tools but no framework for using them strategically. AI becomes another tab open in the browser, rather than a fundamental shift in how work gets done.

The opportunity is real.
Organizations that have moved from experimentation to integration are seeing tangible outcomes:

  • AI-powered recruitment tools reduce time-to-hire by an average of 30 days.
  • AI automates up to 60% of routine HR tasks, saving employees five or more hours per week.
  • Predictive analytics reduces voluntary turnover by 22–28% in the first year of deployment.

Capturing this opportunity requires the right tools and the right strategy.

Why 2026 is different from every other year of "AI in HR"

1. Skills-based hiring has gone mainstream.
Josh Bersin's 2026 Talent Report found that 72% of companies are moving away from degree requirements in favor of skills-based evaluation. Gartner reports that 65% of enterprises are actively prioritizing it. The traditional resume is no longer the most reliable signal of candidate quality, especially in tech roles where the half-life of skills is just two years.

2. Agentic AI has arrived.
Earlier generations of HR AI could automate tasks or analyze data. Agentic AI can plan, act, and iterate across entire workflows without constant human direction. 48% of large companies have already adopted agentic AI in HR, with projections showing 327% growth by 2027. This is no longer experimental.

3. Regulatory pressure is real.
The EU AI Act now classifies hiring AI as high-risk, making transparency and audit trails a legal requirement. Any AI tool influencing hiring decisions must be explainable. Black-box systems are a compliance liability.

What separates genuinely useful HR AI tools from the rest

They augment judgment rather than replace it.
Great HR AI tools make professionals better at their jobs. They surface the right information at the right moment, flag unnoticed patterns, and reduce cognitive load. Tools that try to remove humans entirely create legal risk and distrust. 88% of HR leaders haven’t seen ROI largely because their tools automate the wrong things.

They generate actionable insight, not just output.
Predictive models identify at-risk employees six months before they leave, skills-gap analyses shape hiring plans before a role opens, and candidate matching highlights transferable potential. This is the difference between AI that saves time and AI that changes decisions.

They are transparent and explainable.
Employees trust AI-generated reviews twice as often when they understand the criteria. 67% of candidates accept AI screening as long as a human makes the final call and the process is explained. Transparency builds trust, drives adoption, and ensures compliance.

Top AI tools for HR managers in 2026

HireVue
Standard for AI-powered video interviews and structured candidate assessments at scale. Cuts time-to-hire by 50%, supports 40+ languages, and uses IO psychologist-vetted guides. Bias audits and deterministic algorithms ensure fairness. Ideal for regulated industries and high-volume hiring.

Eightfold AI
Built for skills-first talent strategy. Maps 1.6 billion career profiles to a skills graph, matching candidates on potential rather than keywords. Increases recruiter productivity by 50%+ and reduces diversity sourcing time by 85%. Best for large enterprises focused on internal mobility and workforce planning.

Workday
Comprehensive HR platform with agentic AI for workforce planning, analytics, and employee lifecycle management. Acquisition of HiredScore integrates AI recruiting orchestration. Suitable for organizations needing a single system for headcount planning to performance reviews.

Lattice
Focuses on employee performance and engagement. AI identifies growth patterns, surfaces feedback trends, and flags disengagement early. Predictive models detect at-risk employees six months in advance, enabling targeted retention strategies. Ideal for culture and retention-focused organizations.

HackerEarth
Covers full tech hiring lifecycle, from sourcing developers through hackathons to live technical interviews. OnScreen AI interview agent uses lifelike avatars for structured, bias-free interviews. Ensures verification and cheat-proof processes. Trusted by Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Barclays, and Walmart.

Moving from experimentation to impact: a practical framework

1. Start with one high-friction problem.
Automate workflows that cost the most time or cause the most inconsistency typically initial candidate screening. Measure outcomes to justify next investments.

2. Define success before deployment.
47% of CHROs haven’t established clear AI productivity metrics. Set baseline and target improvements: time-to-shortlist, quality-of-hire, recruiter hours per hire anything trackable.

3. Put managers in the loop.
AI adoption gaps are often a manager problem. Give managers specific use cases, integrate AI into workflows, and provide language to discuss it with their teams.

The bottom line

AI will not change HR’s fundamental nature it remains a people function requiring judgment, empathy, and context. What AI improves is:

  • The quality of information available for every decision.
  • The time HR teams spend on work that doesn’t require judgment.

Organizations getting ahead in 2026 are those that select the right tools for the right problems and give teams structure to use them effectively. That is where the real advantage lies.

How to Handle Conflict at Work

How to Handle Conflict at Work

HR leaders often hear the same concern: "Small issues are turning into big problems, and teams are getting harder to manage."

They’re right. Conflict isn’t new, but how it appears today is different. Teams move faster, deadlines are tighter, and the pressure to deliver is constant. Friction builds quickly, and what used to stay small now escalates before anyone notices.

Here’s what most teams miss: the same conflict slowing them down can also be the thing that makes them stronger.

How Small Issues Turn Into Big Problems

You’ve probably seen this pattern before.

It starts with a misunderstanding, a missed expectation, or a poorly communicated decision. Nothing major, just enough tension to create distance.

That tension rarely gets addressed. Instead, it turns into silence. People stop raising concerns, avoid difficult conversations, and begin working around each other instead of with each other.

Over time, silence becomes disengagement. Collaboration drops. Trust weakens. Performance slips, and there’s no single moment you can point to as the cause. You’re left wondering, "What actually went wrong here?"

The shift that changes everything: the best teams don’t avoid conflict. They address it early. Honest communication and neutral guidance turn potential problems into opportunities to strengthen teams.

Conflict Is More Predictable Than It Feels

Most workplace conflict comes from a few common triggers:

  • Miscommunication or lack of clarity
  • Unclear roles and ownership gaps
  • Differences in work styles or expectations
  • Pressure from deadlines and performance targets

Recognizing these patterns early makes conflict easier to manage and often preventable.

Step 1: Make It Easy to Speak Up Early

The biggest reason conflict escalates is silence.

People notice issues early but hesitate to raise them. Maybe they don’t feel safe. Maybe they think it’s not worth it. By the time it surfaces, it always is.

The fix is straightforward:

  • Create regular space for honest conversations
  • Normalize feedback outside formal reviews
  • Train managers to handle uncomfortable discussions confidently

When people speak early, problems stay small and solvable.

Step 2: Act Early It Only Gets Harder

Many teams wait, hoping issues will resolve themselves. Conflict doesn’t disappear.

Small issues become frustration. Frustration becomes disengagement. Disengagement becomes attrition.

The best HR teams act early, even when conversations aren’t perfect. Early action is always easier than late correction.

Step 3: Managers Decide How Most Conflicts End

Strong HR processes matter, but most conflicts begin with managers.

Many managers aren’t equipped to handle conflict well. They avoid it, rush it, or escalate too quickly.

What works:

  • Listen before reacting. Understand what’s happening before seeking a resolution.
  • Stay neutral under pressure. Avoid taking sides prematurely.
  • Give clear, specific feedback. Vague conversations leave both sides confused.

When managers get this right, most conflicts resolve before HR intervention is needed.

Step 4: Focus on What Happened, Not Who Someone Is

It’s easy to say, "They’re difficult to work with."

It’s more effective to say, "Here’s what happened and the impact it had."

This shift:

  • Reduces defensiveness
  • Keeps conversations objective
  • Leads to faster, more durable outcomes

People can change behaviors. They resist being labeled.

Step 5: Give People a Process They Can Trust

Uncertainty worsens conflict.

Employees ask: Who do I go to? What happens next? Will this be handled fairly?

If answers aren’t clear, people stay silent or escalate too late. A simple, transparent process builds confidence and encourages early action.

How to implement:

  • Document it
  • Communicate it
  • Ensure managers know it as well as HR

Where Things Usually Go Wrong

Even strong HR teams fall into common traps:

  • Ignoring early warning signs — hoping small issues resolve themselves
  • Taking sides too quickly — before understanding the full picture
  • Relying on policy over people — process matters, but relationships matter more
  • Focusing on blame instead of outcomes — conflict resolution isn’t about who’s right

The goal isn’t to assign fault. It’s to decide what works next.

The Bottom Line

Conflict isn’t going away. How you handle it is a choice.

Handled poorly: drains teams and erodes culture.
Handled well: builds trust, sharpens communication, and strengthens performance faster than most team-building initiatives.

The best workplaces aren’t conflict-free.
They are just better at navigating it than everyone else.

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