More than half of all AI-driven interactions with job applicants in Germany now take place outside standard office hours — a shift that is reshaping recruitment timelines and candidate reach. The Adecco Group reported on June 18 that its artificial-intelligence tools have handled 1.2 million candidate contacts across ten countries, including roughly 250,000 fully automated AI interviews.
The numbers tell a clear story about efficiency. Time-to-hire has dropped by 50 percent, and the placement rate now exceeds 80 percent. A key driver: candidates are engaging with the system when it suits them, not when HR is at their desks. The personnel service provider noted that over half of all interactions occur during evenings, weekends, or early mornings.
New specialist tools are entering the market to support this shift. In mid-June, providers such as Luxia.cl and JobVantage unveiled applications that optimize résumés for applicant-tracking systems or aggregate candidate profiles. Document analysis is also leaning heavily on AI, parsing certificates and qualifications at speed.
The legal side of going paperless
While digital processes accelerate hiring, the legal framework for documenting mandatory workplace tasks remains under construction. In occupational safety, digital training records are currently permissible. Germany’s Fourth Bureaucracy Relief Act (BEG IV) replaced the written-form requirement with text-form in many areas at the start of 2025.
Yet a specific clarification for safety instructions under the Occupational Safety Act is still pending. The Bundesrat did not pass the relevant clause at the end of 2025. In practice, supervisory authorities accept digital documentation — provided it sensibly complements the oral and practical components.
Vocational training has moved further ahead. The Magdeburg Chamber of Crafts now acts as a system provider for digital training logs. These are legally valid under the Vocational Training Act. Apprentices can send their reports as PDFs directly to examination boards. For minors, a printed summary remains available to collect parents’ signatures.
Smaller firms tap into efficiency gains
Digitalization is not limited to large corporations. HR interim management projects at companies with fewer than 100 employees show that core processes can become digital within three months. Common improvements include reorganizing document structures, setting up digital FAQ systems, and automating onboarding workflows.
Separately, employees and public administration face further changes. Starting in July, a pilot project in the state of Hesse will let tax authorities propose pre-filled tax assessments. The aim is to reduce bureaucracy for citizens and employers alike. A new app will allow certain groups — for example, workers without children — to file taxes with minimal effort. The catch: they must have registered for the procedure by early spring 2026.







