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How to Ease Candidate Interview Scheduling Pains with Automation

Interview scheduling is a universal pain point for recruiters. The right technology can help.


A group of people standing on a purple circuit board.


The interview is one of the most fundamental aspects of an organization’s hiring process, but getting those appointments on everyone’s calendars can be a logistical nightmare. And relying on a tedious manual system may leave candidates with a bad first impression.

“People don’t have their calendars up-to-date, or they cancel and reschedule constantly,” says Lin Lin Phan, talent operations manager at MuleSoft, a San Francisco-based technology firm. “Things happen, and we’re the ones who have to step in and find a replacement interviewer before it has a negative effect on the candidate’s experience.” 

Fortunately, technology can help with automation tools that streamline the scheduling process. 

Easing Pain Points

Interview scheduling is one of the first experiences a candidate has with an employer, so it’s important to get it right. “You can imagine how disrespected candidates feel when the interview takes too long to set up or is constantly being rescheduled,” says Danielle Weinblatt, founder and CEO of New York City-based recruiting automation software company ConveyIQ.

Manual processes can also be error-prone, especially for organizations with high volumes of candidates and positions. Benefits of automation include increased efficiency and productivity for recruiters, a reduced time to fill positions, and an enhanced candidate experience since individuals can self-schedule and reschedule from any device. “Interview-scheduling software helps eliminate back-and-forth e-mails and time-intensive phone calls, allows the hiring team to view upcoming interview schedules in real time, and lets them spend more time sourcing and engaging with candidates,” says Steve Tiufekchiev, chief evangelist at Chicago-based recruiting software company Yello. 

Here’s how it works: Once a candidate is selected for screening, recruiters provide the job seeker with available time slots by e-mail or SMS text message. “The tool goes through all the interviewers’ online calendars and digests their availability in real time,” says Ahryun Moon, CEO and co-founder of San Francisco-based interview-scheduling platform GoodTime. “Recruiters can access both the candidates’ and interview team’s schedules to set multiple interviews at once and quickly make real-time changes.”

A variety of interviews, including phone screens, onsite panels and video meetings, can be set up on all the participants’ calendars, and anyone can make changes without the recruiter being involved. The system automatically confirms appointments, syncs with the applicant tracking system, and sends reminder notifications to candidates and interviewers by e-mail or text.

Selecting Scheduling Solutions 

Here are a few factors to consider when shopping for interview- scheduling software:

  • The solution’s connectivity to your calendar and its integration with your applicant tracking system.
  • The number of employees who will use the tool. Some platforms set a fixed price up to a certain number of workers, while others charge per user.
  • The complexity of your interviews. Do you need to accommodate multiple formats, including one-on-ones, panels, back-to-back interviews and round-robin scenarios setting up hiring teams based on who’s available? “Most tools are amazing at booking a one-to-one meeting but are not made for more-complex interview use cases,” says Ahryun Moon, CEO and co-founder of interview-scheduling platform GoodTime.
  • Rescheduling capability. “More than 50 percent of scheduled interviews are rescheduled,” Moon says. “The tool must be good at picking alternative interviewers on short notice.”

What to Look For 

There is a broad range of software available, including enterprise platforms such as ConveyIQ, GoodTime and Yello, as well as free, basic tools like Calendly. One of the latest features for LinkedIn Recruiter allows candidates to reserve a time based on calendar availability without leaving the site.

Some common features include:

  • Automatic reminders. These are sent to all parties before an interview. “You can personalize them, set the frequency and day and time of the week, and attach employer or candidate information,” Weinblatt says. “You can include a checklist, links, directions to the office, an assessment, a candidate profile.”
  • Availability preferences. Organizers and interviewers can set availability and block off unavailable times. Certain mechanisms could be put in place, such as immovable interview blocks on the hiring manager’s calendar, which could be lifted only by contacting the recruiter. 
  • Device syncing. Any new interview, update or note is automatically synced across all devices.
  • Meeting room booking. Organizers can specify possible locations to choose from.
  • Metrics. “If the tool can provide rich metrics around process efficiency and hold interviewers accountable, you can drastically improve the overall process,” Moon says. 

Many vendors also allow HR to demo the product before purchasing it and offer live support and resources to users after they do.

But Wait, There’s More

In addition to scheduling, technology solutions that incorporate artificial intelligence (AI) are being integrated into other parts of the recruitment process—from answering initial candidate questions to assessing skills. 

And candidates appear to be OK with that. More than half are comfortable with the idea of interacting with machine-learning chatbots and other AI applications during the hiring process, according to a recent survey of 200 job seekers by Allegis Global Solutions, a Hanover, Md.-based recruitment process outsourcing firm. 

That’s good news for the companies that developed bots now on the market, including Mya from Mya Systems, which collects information from applicants and assists in scheduling interviews, and GoHire’s GoBe, a job search chatbot that leverages Facebook Messenger to connect jobs and candidates.

GoBe allows you to create customized prescreening questions for each job, and applications can be routed to  recruiters via e-mail or get pushed to an applicant tracking system. Candidates can also engage GoBe through a company’s careers site.

If your current scheduling process is a pain, it might be time to get some interviews of your own on the calendar—with the vendors whose tech offerings best align with your needs. 

Roy Maurer is an online writer/editor for SHRM who focuses on talent acquisition. 

Illustration by Stephan Schmitz for HR Magazine.

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