Early-stage hiring is broken across the industry and most organisations are still waiting to feel enough pain before they act. At icrewsystems, we chose to move first.
Akshay Eti, icrewsystems
Hiring Systems · AI in HR · Innovation
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Most Impactful AI Solution Provider - Award Recipients
What began as a conviction that hiring deserved better became a system the broader industry has now taken notice of.
Every industry has its inherited assumptions about things that have always been done a certain way for so long that nobody stops to ask whether they should be done that way at all. In hiring, that assumption is the resume. It sits at the centre of almost every early-stage process, treated as a reliable proxy for potential, a fair starting point, a system that works.
Except it doesn't. Not really. Not at the speed and scale that modern organisations actually operate.
At icrewsystems, we recognised this early. Not as a crisis we were managing but as a direction. The way early-stage hiring was structured was always going to hit a ceiling, and we'd rather confront that ceiling deliberately, on our own terms, than wait for it to impose itself on us. That decision is what led to everything that followed.
Understanding the Industry-Wide Problem
The challenge with traditional early-stage hiring isn't unique to any one company. It's structural. Resumes are retrospective by nature they capture what a person has done, not how they think, adapt, or communicate under real conditions. Manual screening introduces fatigue and inconsistency at exactly the moments where consistency matters most. And the absence of a standardised evaluation framework means that two equally capable candidates can receive completely different outcomes, not because of merit, but because of circumstance.
"Most hiring problems aren't execution problems. They are design problems and they compound silently until the cost becomes impossible to ignore."
In remote-first environments, these cracks deepen further. Asynchronous gaps slow things down. Scheduling friction adds days where there should be hours. Signal quality degrades at precisely the stage where it should be highest. By the time a genuinely strong candidate reaches a human decision-maker, the process has often already lost several others just as strong.
We knew this. We'd felt the edges of it ourselves. And instead of waiting for it to become a bigger problem, we asked a different question entirely: what would it look like if we designed this from scratch?
The icrewsystems Approach: Thinking in Systems, Not Steps
As the OIC steering this initiative, the first shift I pushed for was a change in how we framed the problem. Most conversations about improving hiring begin at the level of tasks speed up screening, add an interview round, get a better ATS. We refused that starting point.
We said: hiring is a system. And if you want different outputs, you have to redesign the system not optimise the steps within it.
That meant going back to first principles. What is the actual purpose of early-stage evaluation? It's not to process applications. It's to generate meaningful, comparable signal about how candidates think and communicate under real conditions. Everything else is scaffolding. And the question became: is the scaffolding we've inherited actually serving that purpose?
The answer was plainly no. So we built something new.
Stage 0 — A New Way In
What emerged from that process is what we now call Stage 0: a self-driven, AI-led interview layer that sits at the very entry point of our hiring funnel, before any resume is reviewed or any call is scheduled.
The moment a candidate submits their application, they receive a prompt to initiate their own interview. No waiting. No scheduling. No inbox dependency. The process begins immediately, and the responsibility to engage sits clearly with the candidate from the very first moment.
The interview consists of twenty dynamically generated questions, each requiring a response within a strict one-minute window. The randomisation ensures consistency in challenge level. The time constraint does something more important it makes rehearsal impossible. You can't polish a one-minute answer the way you polish a bullet point. You have to think, structure, and communicate in real time. That's the signal we were always missing and could never extract from a resume.
Every session is recorded. Every submission triggers an automated alert to the HR team. And every candidate receives a response within forty-eight hours not as a nice-to-have, but as a design commitment baked into the system itself.
What It Feels Like to See It Work
I'll be honest, Building something genuinely new, from inside an organisation with real operational demands, is not a clean or linear experience. There were hard weeks. There were moments where the simpler path would have been to iterate on what we already had.
We weren't here to make the old system marginally better. We were here to replace it with something worth being proud of.
"The best systems don't feel like technology. They feel like things that should have always worked this way."
And when Stage 0 started running at full capacity when the review queue was clean, the evaluation criteria were consistent, and candidates were getting real responses in real time that's exactly how it felt. Not like an upgrade. Like a correction.
Why This Matters Beyond icrewsystems
The problem Stage 0 solves is not an icrewsystems problem. It is the industry's problem that organisations everywhere are running early-stage hiring processes that were designed for a different era, a different volume, and a different candidate landscape. Most are aware of it. Far fewer are doing anything structural about it.
What icrewsystems did differently was not wait for the pain to become unbearable before responding. We moved proactively, built deliberately, and stayed committed to the idea that hiring the very first interaction a person has with an organisation deserves to be designed with the same rigour we'd apply to any other critical system.
Remote-first organisations have the most to gain from this shift. Stage 0 is inherently asynchronous, inherently scalable, and inherently consistent across geographies. A candidate in any timezone completes the same structured process, generates the same quality of signal, and receives the same standard of response. That's not just operational convenience, it's the foundation of fair evaluation at scale.
The Award: and What It Represents
When we received “the Most Impactful AI Solution Provider award", the moment that stayed with me wasn't the announcement, it was the quiet acknowledgement within the team that the work had meant something beyond our own walls. We built this to solve a real problem, for real people on both sides of the hiring table. To have that recognised externally affirmed something we'd believed internally from the beginning.
The award matters. But what it represents matters more: that building with genuine intention, refusing to settle for incremental fixes, and staying committed to the finish line even when it's hard is always worth it.
The Only Question Left
Early-stage hiring across the industry is due for a reckoning. The resume will not survive as the primary filter indefinitely. The organisations that begin redesigning now thoughtfully, systemically, with real conviction are the ones that will find themselves ahead when that shift fully arrives.
At icrewsystems, we didn't wait to be forced. We built our answer before the question became urgent. And watching Stage 0 run, watching it respect candidates' time, sharpen our signal, and give our team back the space to do what they're actually best at that's the part that still thrills me every day.
This is the icrewsystems way. Not patching. Reimagining.
We're just getting started.