Artificial intelligence has dramatically raised the baseline quality of resumes. Candidates now have access to tools that refine language, optimize keywords, and tailor applications to specific roles in seconds. While this can improve clarity, it also creates challenges for employers trying to distinguish genuine capability from surface-level polish.
A recent Business Insider article even suggested the resume itself has lost relevance for many types of roles and hiring decisions that companies make.
For executives, a resume remains a necessity (at least for now) but today’s new tools require organizations to evolve how they evaluate candidates — starting earlier in the process and extending well beyond the resume itself.
1. Start with Ultra-Clear Job Descriptions and Screening Criteria
One of the most effective ways to combat AI-generated, irrelevant applications is clarity. According to recent reporting in Hunt Scanlon Media, research shows that vague job postings invite auto-applications and unqualified candidates, particularly in an AI-enabled market.
To reduce noise and improve applicant quality, job descriptions and screening criteria should clearly define:
- Must-have and nice-to-have hard skills
- Minimum experience thresholds
- Required certifications or credentials
- Role-specific screening questions
- Short mandatory tasks or questions that require effort and attention
These elements help filter out mass-generated applications and signal that the role requires thoughtful, deliberate engagement. Clear expectations also benefit qualified candidates by helping them self-select appropriately.
2. Leverage Advanced ATS and Screening Tools Thoughtfully
As noted in the same article by Hunt Scanlon, newer applicant tracking systems are increasingly capable of identifying AI-generated content. These tools can analyze writing patterns, tone consistency, and behavioral indicators in screening responses.
Used appropriately, these tools don’t replace human judgment; they help prioritize it by identifying candidates worth deeper evaluation.
3. Treat the Resume as a Starting Point, Not Proof
Resumes should initiate conversations, not determine outcomes. AI can improve formatting, language, and structure, but it cannot replace demonstrated leadership ability, judgment, or real-world performance. Treat resumes as a high-level snapshot, then move quickly into deeper evaluation through interviews, case discussions, and references.
4. Use Structured, Behavioral Interviewing
As Harvard Business Review suggests, behavioral interviewing remains one of the most effective ways to assess real experience. Instead of asking candidates to describe responsibilities, ask them to walk through specific situations, decisions they made, trade-offs they considered, and results achieved.
AI can generate strong narratives, but it struggles to fabricate nuanced follow-up detail. Probing questions such as “What would you do differently?” or “How did stakeholders respond?” help surface authenticity and depth.
5. Incorporate Real-Time Strategic Discussion
Case discussions, scenario walkthroughs, or strategic problem-solving conversations reveal how candidates think, not just how they write. These interactions allow organizations to assess analytical ability, communication style, and decision-making under pressure.
Unlike resumes, which can be refined asynchronously, real-time dialogue exposes strengths and gaps that are difficult to script.
6. Assess Cultural and Leadership Fit Explicitly
AI can improve wording, but it cannot replicate interpersonal dynamics, leadership presence, or values alignment. Structured assessments focused on culture, communication style, and leadership approach help ensure candidates will succeed beyond the first 90 days.
Clear articulation of what success looks like in your organization makes it harder for surface-level polish to mask misalignment.
7. Rely on Targeted Reference Checks
AI can help candidates describe achievements, but it cannot corroborate them. Reference checks remain one of the strongest defenses against resume inflation when conducted with intention. Ask references about scope, impact, leadership style, and performance under pressure. Consistency across references often matters more than any single endorsement.
8. Look for Consistency Across the Process
Discrepancies between a resume, interview responses, and reference feedback are often more telling than any single data point. Strong candidates demonstrate consistent narratives, evolving detail, and coherent career logic.
AI-polished resumes may sound impressive, but inconsistency across stages often signals exaggeration rather than excellence.
9. Work with an Executive Search Partner
Partnering with an executive search firm helps organizations look beyond polished resumes by shifting the focus from applications to active candidate engagement and rigorous assessment. Executive search firms identify and evaluate talent through research, structured interviews, and targeted reference checks, reducing reliance on resumes altogether.
20/20 Foresight Executive Talent Solutions employs a proprietary evaluation framework called the “Deep Dive” designed to assess leadership capability across multiple dimensions. The Deep Dive combines in-depth interview sessions, detailed work history analysis, skills questionnaires, aptitude and personality assessments, and reference checks. Rather than focusing solely on what a candidate claims to have accomplished, the process explores how results were achieved, how decisions were made, and how the candidate operates within complex organizations.
This layered approach allows us to examine patterns across a candidate’s career including leadership style, strategic thinking, problem-solving approach, and the ability to navigate stakeholder dynamics. These insights provide a far more complete picture of executive capability than a resume alone.
The Bottom Line
AI has raised the baseline quality of resumes but it hasn’t changed what makes leaders effective. Organizations that adapt their evaluation processes to emphasize behavior, judgment, and real-world impact will continue to identify exceptional talent, even in an era of highly polished candidate materials.
The goal isn’t to outsmart AI — it’s to hire beyond it.