Data Explained

Join 375,000+ email subscribers:

81% of hiring managers in the U.S prioritize AI literacy
Last Updated on April 10, 2026 by Monica Ebunoluwa
Last Updated on April 10, 2026 by Monica Ebunoluwa

 

Hiring used to revolve around experience and degrees. Now, it’s changing. 

 

According to the Resume Genius “AI Impact on Hiring” survey, a striking 81% of hiring managers now prioritize candidates with AI-related skills. 

 

The survey included responses from 1,000 hiring managers across the U.S.

 

It means that understanding how to use AI tools has become a mainstream job requirement rather than a niche tech skill. 

 

TL;DR

 

  • 8 in 10 hiring managers now prioritize AI-literate candidates.
  • Nearly half rely on AI tools to sort those applications.
  • And 76% admit those same tools have made authenticity verification tougher.
wdt_ID wdt_created_by wdt_created_at wdt_last_edited_by wdt_last_edited_at HR Status Percentage
1 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:45 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:45 PM Hiring managers who prioritize AI skills 81%
2 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:45 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:45 PM Gen Z hiring managers who prioritize AI skills 89%
3 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:45 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:45 PM Hiring managers who use AI to screen resumes 48%

Source: Resume Genius “AI Impact on Hiring” Survey of 1,000 U.S hiring managers

 

Which AI Skills Employers Actually Want

wdt_ID wdt_created_by wdt_created_at wdt_last_edited_by wdt_last_edited_at Skills Share of hiring managers who look for it
1 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Using AI tools (ChatGPT, MidJourney, automation) 36%
2 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Problem-solving for AI challenges 35%
3 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Ethical AI understanding 33%
4 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Integrating AI into workflows 31%
5 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Machine learning & data analysis 19%
6 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Prompt engineering 16%
7 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:52 PM Developing/programming models (Python/TensorFlow) 16%

 

The most in-demand ability is practical and straightforward: using AI tools effectively, cited by 36% of hiring managers. 

 

Right behind are problem-solving around AI (35%) and ethical understanding of AI use (33%).

 

This tells us that companies are hiring for applications. 

 

They want people who can plug AI into everyday work rather than build algorithms from scratch. 

 

Only about one in five managers (19%) say they’re looking for machine-learning or data-analysis expertise, and just 16% prioritise prompt engineering or programming models.

 

In a recent PwC workforce survey, 70% of CEOs say AI will significantly change how their companies create, deliver, and capture value over the next three years.

 

The Machines Are Hiring Too

wdt_ID wdt_created_by wdt_created_at wdt_last_edited_by wdt_last_edited_at Hiring process Share of hiring managers
1 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:57 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:57 PM Use AI to screen resumes 48%
2 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:57 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:57 PM Believe AI makes verifying authenticity harder 76%
3 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:57 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:57 PM Seen AI-generated resumes/cover letters 74%
4 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:57 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:57 PM Concerned about AI-generated applications 58%
5 Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:57 PM Monica Ebunoluwa 10/04/2026 12:57 PM Encountered deepfakes in interviews 17%

 

Nearly half of hiring managers (48%) now use AI to screen resumes. 

 

That means an applicant’s first audience is software trained to filter for specific keywords and phrasing.

 

This automation has made recruitment faster but also trickier. 

 

A huge 76% of managers say AI tools have made it harder to verify authenticity in applications. 

 

Three-quarters (74%) report seeing AI-generated resumes or cover letters, and 17% have even encountered deepfake candidates in interviews.

 

Gen Z Managers Push for Ethical AI Use

 

Gen Z hiring managers, who grew up during the explosion of generative AI, are the most enthusiastic adopters (and also the most concerned about its misuse). 

 

For younger recruiters, being AI-savvy means more than technical know-how.

 

Interestingly, Gen Z also reports the highest rate of catching candidates trying to cheat with AI-generated materials (46%, compared with 32% among Millennials in the Resume Genius report).

 

What this Means for Jobseekers in the U.S

 

AI fluency is the new digital literacy. 

 

Being able to navigate ChatGPT or integrate automation tools into a workflow is now as basic as spreadsheet skills were in the 2000s.

 

For job seekers, that means showcasing practical competence matters more than technical mastery. 

 

It also means honesty counts more than ever. 

 

Hiring managers are looking for proof of genuine skill, such as portfolios or work samples that confirm an applicant can actually use the tools they list.

 

ELI5: AI Literacy for U.S Job Seekers

 

Most hiring managers in the United States say knowing how to use AI tools like ChatGPT makes candidates stand out more than traditional qualifications. 

 

Nearly half of recruiters have already used AI to screen candidates, and many now prefer applicants who can work smartly with automation.

 

Job seekers who learn to use AI tools are seen as faster, which gives them a major edge in today’s job market. 

 

Sources:

Resume Genius “AI Impact on Hiring” Survey | PwC Workforce data

Last Updated on April 10, 2026 by Monica Ebunoluwa

Share

Related