Dave Walk Overhead a guy today explaining how his service for hiring managers uses predictive filtering to weed out job applicants automatically. Out of all of the applications of machine learning this good be one of the worst. Like how it would deny someone if they didn't have X years of experience in mySQL. It's really kind of sad.
🙄 Doug Belshaw Well it's better than one person I heard of who (literally) threw the hundreds of paper applications from the top of his stairs. Ones that got to the bottom were 'meant to be interviewed'. To be honest, the fit between what most organisations need and how they filter - usually by awkward credentials - is broken. That's why Open Badges are so exciting: openbadges.org
9y, 27w 6 replies
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Josh Sharp I've heard that story! Surely apocryphal?
9y, 27w 2 replies
🙄 Doug Belshaw Possibly. But having been involved on the periphery of hiring decisions at previous orgs, even the 'formal' work flow isn't too far off.
9y, 27w reply
😀 Tom I've heard the version where the person who was supposed to go through applications took the top half of a stack and threw it into the trash saying, "I don't want to hire unlucky people." I think that was on reddit...
9y, 18w reply
Dave Walk The system is definitely broken in a lot of places. One problem is that it is way too easy to fire off a resume. A smart company will think of a better way to find the right employee. To me at least fit and the ability/want to learn are the most important qualities and that's hard to represent o a resume.
9y, 27w reply
🦿 Lucian Marin This was a better explanation of what Open Badges tries to achieve than site itself.
9y, 27w 1 reply
🙄 Doug Belshaw Well I was on the original badges team at Mozilla... ;-)
9y, 27w reply