AI Ethics in Recruiting: Why Strategy Comes Before Tools
Jeremy Lyons explains why most TA teams fail at AI adoption by skipping the ethics layer and jumping straight to tools, and what the best companies do instead
Get this in your inbox every week. Join 26,000+ subscribers.
Jeremy Lyons shares insights on building an ethics-first AI strategy for recruiting operations from his nine years leading RecOps transformations.
Co-Pilot or Replacement: The Decision Most TA Leaders Skip
Every talent acquisition leader is being asked to show AI results. The pressure is real and the expectations are high. But Jeremy Lyons argues that most companies are jumping straight to tool selection without answering the question that determines whether any of it works.
Are you building AI to be a co-pilot for your team, or are you building it to replace something entirely?
"There are functionally two choices when you think of your AI strategy. You are going to design your AI strategy to be a co-pilot, or you have to acknowledge that some companies are genuinely using it to replace something, whether that is the humans, whether that is an entire system." -- Jeremy Lyons
This is not a theoretical exercise. The answer reshapes your architecture, your team structure, your ethics framework, and whether your people trust the rollout or resist it. Companies that skip this step end up buying tools that solve the wrong problem.
AI in Recruiting: Why 70% of Conference Sessions Miss the Point
Jeremy recently observed that over 70% of sessions at SHRM Talent mentioned AI in their title or description. But the gap between that marketing and actual boots-on-the-ground application is enormous.
"People know that people want to hear about AI. So it is on every conference schedule. You have a lot of people posturing that they are true experts in what they are talking about, just to get on stage to say that so they can position themselves." -- Jeremy Lyons
The real innovation is happening at the tactical level. Coordinators and specialists who use these tools every day are figuring out what works faster than the senior leaders theorizing on stage. That creates a power shift most organizations have not adjusted for: the people with the deepest AI fluency are often the most junior.
This mirrors what we see on Human Cloud. Companies searching for AI-enabled workforce solutions are not looking for theory. They want platforms and partners who have already implemented, already tested, and can show real results. That is why aggregating verified solutions with real business cases matters more than ever.
The Ethics-First Framework for AI Adoption
Jeremy's approach flips the typical AI adoption playbook. Instead of starting with tools, he starts with ethics.
"Start with the AI ethics. How are we thinking about this problem? How are we going to use it to address this problem? Are we going to have any adverse impacts if we implement something like this? Ask those questions before you even start to build anything." -- Jeremy Lyons
Only after the ethics framework is in place does he move to the tactical questions: Are your job descriptions optimized? Are your candidate touchpoints delivering value? Is it better to train more recruiters or deploy agents? The ethical grounding makes every downstream decision clearer and more defensible.
Agent-to-Agent Interviewing and the End of Time-to-Fill
The most provocative prediction from the conversation: agent-to-agent interviewing will collapse the early stages of hiring into seconds.
"I have my agent, company has their agent, hiring manager has their agent. You cover three interviews in a nanosecond. We have just dropped time-to-fill down to single digit days because all these interviews have happened really, really quickly and we have high signal on all of this." -- Jeremy Lyons
Tony added his own prediction: his daughter, who is about to turn 12, may never go through a traditional interview process. Skills will be verified automatically, matching will be near instant, and negotiation will be fully transparent.
This future requires infrastructure. When agents are screening, matching, and interviewing across hundreds of platforms, someone needs to orchestrate the connections. That is exactly the problem Human Cloud solves: creating the infrastructure layer that makes a fragmented workforce ecosystem function as a single, intelligent system.
The Bottom Line
AI adoption in recruiting operations is not a technology problem. It is a strategy problem. The companies getting it right are the ones that start with ethics, define whether they are building co-pilots or replacements, and invest in operational foundations before buying tools. The ones getting it wrong are treating AI like a feature checklist under productivity pressure.
For TA leaders navigating this shift, Jeremy's framework offers a clear starting point: answer the hard questions first, build the foundation, then deploy with purpose.
About Jeremy Lyons
Jeremy Lyons is a second-generation recruiter with nine years in recruiting operations. He founded RecOps Collective to help companies build operationally sound talent acquisition functions ready for AI adoption.
Listen to the full episode: Human Cloud Podcast on Spotify
This article was adapted from the Human Cloud Podcast. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.
Get insights like this every week
Join 26,000+ leaders staying ahead of the flexible talent market.
