Sending out dozens of job applications and hearing nothing back can be a heartbreaking experience.
Unfortunately, as a result of artificial intelligence, it is also becoming common.
Artificial intelligence has made it easier than ever to generate polished resumes and apply for roles at scale, which means employers are now sorting through hundreds of near-identical applications for a single position.
In that environment, even strong candidates can struggle to stand out. But it is particularly the case for younger job seekers trying to break into the workforce, where challenges are compounded by limited work history.
In this environment, the problem is not always a lack of effort or ability. It is a hiring process that now filters candidates earlier, faster, and with less reliable information.
New data from Australian employer intelligence platform Xref, drawing on over 7 million references processed globally, shows how this shift is reshaping hiring in real time.
According to Xref, 75 per cent of HR professionals report catching lies on resumes, while around 21 per cent of candidates are flagged during reference checks, pointing to a growing trust gap in hiring.
Academic and character references also account for only 0.5 per cent and 2.5 percent respectively, despite these often being the most relevant (or only) signals for early-stage candidates.
This both represents the problem – but also the opportunity.
Why strong candidates are being overlooked
We know that employers are making faster decisions earlier in the process, often based on limited and inconsistent signals. This means that candidates who cannot immediately demonstrate credibility are less likely to progress.
Veronica Robinson, who recently finished school, found that strong academic results and extracurricular experience did not translate easily into job opportunities.
“Getting a job shouldn’t come down to luck or who you happen to meet,” she says. “I had the skills, but I didn’t know how to prove them easily on paper alone.”
Her friend Elizabeth Morgan applied for over 50 roles across different fields without securing interviews, despite targeting entry-level positions.
“You know you’re capable, but it’s so hard to prove it without experience,” she says.
Their friend Claire Ward encountered a similar issue in childcare, despite the sector having strong demand for workers, and despite Claire having relevant experience. She was forced to take on multiple smaller roles to make ends meet, instead of one more stable position.
“Trying to piece together a living from different jobs takes a pretty big toll,” she says. “It just shows how difficult the job market is at the moment when even high-demand industries are hard to get into.”
Across these experiences, the consistent issue is not capability, but the absence of clear, verifiable information at the stage where employers are making initial decisions, according to Xref founder and CEO, Lee-Martin Seymour.
A new way to stand out
“AI is making it easier than ever to generate applications, but harder than ever to verify them,” says Seymour.
“When candidates are competing in a market flooded with near-identical submissions, the ability to demonstrate independent credibility becomes a clear point of differentiation.”
This is what led to the launch of Xref.me , a candidate-owned verified career profile platform designed to bring independently verified information to the start of the hiring process rather than the end.
The platform replaces “references available upon request” with verified data that sits alongside an application, allowing referees such as teachers, mentors, and volunteer supervisors to confirm skills, behaviours, and experience upfront.
For hiring managers, this means earlier access to validated information, reducing the time and uncertainty associated with screening large volumes of candidates. Traditional reference checks can take 3 to 5 days, compared to 18 to 24 hours with digital verification.
For job seekers, it creates a way to demonstrate capability before being filtered out, particularly in high-volume hiring environments where most decisions are made quickly.
Seymour says the practical response for candidates is straightforward.
“In entry-level roles, references are often the only way to demonstrate capability,” he says.
“Candidates should be thinking more broadly about who can verify their abilities, including teachers, volunteer supervisors, and mentors, and ensuring that information is available at the point of application rather than waiting until later in the process.”
“Those who provide stronger and more complete validation from the start are more likely to remain in contention.”
As hiring processes continue to strain under the weight of application volume, the future will favour candidates who can clearly, credibly, and early show what they can do.
For a generation entering the workforce, that means the edge will come not from saying more, but from proving it sooner.