AI use is strongly tied to revenue growth
Firms that increased revenue in 2025 had much higher AI adoption rates than those that saw revenue decline. And the industry as a whole has come a long way in terms of AI. With almost everyone now using AI to some degree, competition between firms is increasing; competition from other firms is now the second biggest obstacle to winning new business and a growing concern in this year’s data. The most successful firms are implementing AI throughout the workflow and leveraging it in ways that make them faster than the competition and retain their unique differentiation.
And AI is yielding significant operational benefits when deployed strategically
Recruitment leaders rank the ability to scale without adding headcount and increased recruiter productivity as the top ways that AI is adding value to their organizations. This aligns with what was shared in our conversations with recruitment leaders: simple generative AI point solutions are not enough; to truly see the benefits of AI, firms need to really focus on ROI and closely track the impact on KPIs. Basic generative AI and fragmented point solutions are not going to get the job done.
Most KPI’s are up 11-50% as a result of AI
Leaders overwhelmingly say that the financial impact of AI tools has been positive. But they are also closely tracking the effect on key operational metrics. The majority have seen KPIs improve by 11-25%, and many are seeing a 50% improvement. This aligns with the finding that firms using AI also have better placement times across the board. These improvements are setting a new benchmark for performance and efficiency, with leaders expecting far more from their teams.
AI is rewriting the rules for searching and screening
Recruiters report that searching for candidates takes up the most time in their day, followed by screening applicants. But AI is already having a huge impact on these time-consuming tasks. Most recruiters say AI is reducing the time they spend on searching for and screening candidates by 26-75%, freeing them up to work more jobs and do more relational work.
The benefits of AI increase when deployed across the platform
The impact of AI is amplified when it is deployed across the whole lifecycle, and the recruitment leaders we spoke with said, particularly when it is embedded across the platform. Firms that are using AI for multiple use cases are seeing heightened operational improvements, sometimes more than doubling the impact. And this translates into financial performance as well. 78% of firms that grew revenue by 25+% are using AI tools embedded in their ATS, as opposed to only 51% of those whose revenue declined 10+%. Respondents who say they have AI embedded throughout the workflow also have more than double the chances of fill rates above 75%.
There is still a long way to go on adoption of automation and AI
In spite of the clear financial and operational benefits, many firms still have not fully embraced automation and AI across their platforms. Only 10% of firms report having AI embedded throughout their workflow. 2026 will likely be the year that sees AI in recruiting move from early adoption to full integration.
Successful AI adoption requires data quality, the right leadership, and a clear implementation strategy
Most leaders (71%) feel ready to lead their firms through AI transformation, but when we dig deeper into the remaining obstacles that stand in the way of full adoption, there are some common themes. Data quality and security are challenges many firms have not quite been able to overcome. And 20% say they lack a clear implementation plan. These concerns are consistent for both leaders and recruiters alike. Leaders also report that they are working hard to help recruiters see and feel the benefits of AI in their work. One firm shared that they have created an intentionally diverse group of “AI ambassadors” to make sure the AI wins are relatable across all areas of the organization.
What do the top-performing firms have in common?
This report has identified a number of factors that impact financial and operational performance, but it is worth pulling together a portrait of what the top-performers–those that achieved 25+% revenue growth in 2025–have in common. These firms are rewriting the rules for productivity and efficiency.
Talent management drives revenue growth
Making efficient use of databases and carefully managing candidate submissions and redeployment clearly correlates to revenue growth. And these strategies have significant operational impact as well. 72% of firms that submit multiple candidates to a position and 85% of those that have a redeployment plan report time to place under 20 days.
What do recruiters need to meet these new standards for productivity? AI that super-charges, not replaces, the human
This year’s conversations with recruitment leaders made it clear that a big concern is making sure that AI facilitates human connections with clients and candidates, rather than reducing recruitment to a series of prompts and preset interactions. The focus is on using AI to smooth out friction for both recruiters and candidates without sacrificing differentiation. Leaders indicated they are working hard to allay recruiters’ fears around over-reliance on technology.
AI has biggest impact on search and screening
Recruiters say searching for candidates is by far the most time-consuming part of their day and the most challenging part of the recruitment lifecycle. The good news is that 44% of recruiters say AI is helping them identify better candidates faster, and 34% say they are screening more candidates overall. AI sourcing also tops the list of what recruiters value most about AI.
⅓ note that AI is helping them find more time to connect with clients and candidates, and they rate that as the number one benefit they experience for AI, keeping that human connection that is so crucial for a recruiter’s job satisfaction.
Overall business strategy and economic outlook
45% of firms expect the economy to improve in 2026 (compared to 73% last year), so optimism has dampened, and almost as many expect it to stay the same (40%). Anecdotally, and from qualitative interviews, the expectation is largely for stabilization to modest improvement, not a radical snap back. However, everyone we spoke with was optimistic about their own place in the recruitment ecosystem because they were focused on creating their own tailwinds regardless of prevailing market conditions. The bold leaders we interviewed shared that they expect to gain market share, even if the total market shrinks, by being more agile and more efficient than competitors and using AI to enhance their “special sauce” rather than dilute it.
How are bold firms creating their own tailwinds:
- Super-focus and niche specialization: Instead of chasing every opportunity, the strategy is intense focus. One firm shared that they are narrowing their target market to specific, high-growth, under-penetrated niches within large sectors (e.g., substations in energy), and favoring skilled trades that are showing resilient demand. Others shared that they are really examining where they are winning and losing and aren’t afraid to get out of areas where they are not succeeding.
- Leaders are thinking holistically about the skills mismatch issue, not at a candidate level but at a workforce level. Firms are already sensing this, with candidate training and reskilling being the number one new business line they are looking to expand into this year, and expansion into this domain correlates with revenue growth. One leader shared that they are focused on creating a program to help clients reskill existing employees. 40% of the top-performing firms are expanding candidate reskilling.
- Leaders shared that they are expanding into new services, particularly advisory services. These offerings are part of a shift towards “non-traditional, non-end-to-end recruitment,” with a focus on advisory and consulting to help clients cope with the changing market. 44% of top-performing firms are expanding their consulting services this year.
Conclusion
AI has already reshaped the nature and the pace of the recruitment industry. The most successful firms are investing not just in AI tools, but are thinking strategically about change management and adjusting their KPIs.
Key takeaways:
- AI is already yielding enormous financial and productivity gains across the recruitment industry
- Data quality, strategic leadership, and the right tech are the hurdles for full AI transformation
- Bold leaders are committed to overcoming these challenges in 2026 and are all in on AI
- Recruiters are onboard and, with expectations rising for delivery speed, they already know they cannot go back; the rules have already changed
- The economy may improve marginally in 2026, but visionary leaders are creating their own tailwinds
