Hiring stories
Weaker demand and rising wage costs are leaving most SMEs in a holding pattern, with few planning to add staff over the next year.
Bad AI hires are now feeding costly mistakes, with US employers hit far more often than UK counterparts, a survey shows.
Human judgement is becoming more valuable as AI screens CVs, with candidates wary of being reduced to data points and overlooked for potential.
The appointment signals a sharper European push as Safe builds local leadership ahead of its USD $250 million revenue goal for 2028.
The new unit targets firms expanding across Latin America, where varying rules can complicate cross-border operations and raise compliance costs.
Client mandates and staff retention are at risk as most professional services firms struggle to turn widespread AI use into daily practice.
Entry-level hiring is being reshaped as employers expect junior staff to supervise AI, while 61% in India struggle to find suitable talent.
The move signals tighter financial oversight as IP Fabric steps up hiring and targets more enterprise demand for network visibility tools.
Teams risk wasted cycles and quality slips unless staff can judge when AI output fits the system and when it simply looks right.
The funding will help the London- and New York-based software group expand its AI agents for revenue teams and hire globally.
The insurer's European operations will be refreshed under a multiyear TCS pact aimed at improving resilience, automation and user experience.
Bias concerns are mounting as most Canadian tech firms use AI in HR, while many lack safeguards to prevent discriminatory decisions.
Its valuation has jumped 70% as the Toronto fintech uses fresh capital to broaden AI tools and hire across the business.
Regulatory scrutiny is pushing employers to keep people in hiring decisions, as AI takes on admin rather than replacing HR staff.
The Leeds consultancy is adding 15 AI roles as clients grapple with data and governance hurdles that keep pilots from reaching production.
The new funding will help the Cambridge software company speed product development and expand in the US and Europe as AI bugs grow harder to trace.
Most applicants miss out because their CVs fail to mirror job-ad wording, rather than being blocked outright by software, new research suggests.
More than 600 students left Delhi with guidance on portfolios and studio expectations as MAAC unveiled new training routes for creative jobs.
Skills shortages are now holding back Ireland's tech chiefs as AI investment jumps, with most firms still unable to deploy it at speed.
Faster cross-border payouts for US businesses are at the heart of the payments firm's latest push into one of its biggest markets.