Back in 1995, Match.com launched itself onto the world wide web, and singles running Windows 95 on their 8 megabyte PCs had their first taste of online dating. 20 years later, the landscape of online dating had exploded as the concept of being “online” evolved with mobile devices. While Match.com was (and is currently) still around, its market was now crowded with apps like Tinder, OK Cupid and Bumble.
Like any other development in technology, dating sites and, with more zeal, dating apps have been the target of much criticism. As a single millennial myself, I can’t say many of those criticisms are unfounded. Dating apps have completely changed the rules of “the game” and it’s hard to think of many pros that have come from those changes.
So why in the world are we about to hand talent functions over to these monsters??
In case you think I’m getting ahead of myself by thinking dating apps are encroaching on the talent space, check out this piece from earlier in 2017 about a new app called Bizz. Here’s an excerpt from The Verve, summing up the app:
“Bizz lets users swipe to find connections to network with Bumble’s 20 million users…Bizz profiles let users add verified photos, digital resumes, a skills section and examples of their work.”
It does say in the article how Bizz’s owners, Bumble (the same Bumble as the dating app mentioned above) aims to make the app about networking and building professional relationships rather than about recruiting and finding jobs. But, where there’s networking, there’s job hunting and recruiting happening. Not to mention, it sounds an awful lot like a certain social media platform that started as a professional networking site and is now used extensively by recruiters and job seekers…
It might seem like progress-phobia to hate on an app like this so early in the game, but as a society we can’t stop collectively talking about how dating apps sucked the life out of romance. Why would they be any better at connecting employers and candidates? After all, the two types of relationships aren’t that far off (see: the 6.25 million Google results that pop up when you search “dating recruiting”).
Consider these top detriments dating apps cause to romance, and how they might do it to the TA world too:
Dating apps have made the romance world feel more accessible, but it’s taken the—for lack of a better word—heart out of the game. The same impersonal touch would transfer to the talent acquisition world and make recruiting apps that reflect dating apps more of a hassle than a tool that’s worth using.