HR and Recruiting vacancies Slow but little threat from AI

According to the research, 220,185 HR and recruiting jobs have been posted in the last 12 months in the United Kingdom. Vacancies in this industry have seen an average monthly increase of 1 percent – significantly lower than the 5 percent monthly increase seen in the UK’s job market as a whole in this time period. Despite this slow growth, HR and recruitment jobs spend an average of 15 days online before being filled, a duration which is mirrored in the job market as a whole.
job

There’s new analysis the UK’s HR and recruiting job market to determine how much the digitisation of this industry has affected vacancies. Interestingly, rather than result in decline in these positions, Joblift has found that the demands on HR professionals have adapted to fit the gaps that robotics cannot fill.

According to the research, 220,185 HR and recruiting jobs have been posted in the last 12 months in the United Kingdom. Vacancies in this industry have seen an average monthly increase of 1 percent – significantly lower than the 5 percent monthly increase seen in the UK’s job market as a whole in this time period. Despite this slow growth, HR and recruitment jobs spend an average of 15 days online before being filled, a duration which is mirrored in the job market as a whole.

In terms of pay, only 15 percent of the 148,848 vacancies that stated a salary, offered a wage of £50,000 or above, with the largest percentage (39 percent) of postings advertising a salary of between £20,000 and £30,000 per year. Unsurprisingly, London dominates positions with 19 percent of all vacancies, followed by Manchester with 4 percent, and then Birmingham, also holding 4 percent of HR and recruiting postings; 63 percent of the 220,185 vacancies were for recruiters specifically with these roles experiencing a 1 percent average monthly increase. Interestingly, the 37 percent of vacancies looking for HR roles on a broader basis experienced three times the growth with a 3 percent average monthly increase. Both recruitment and HR jobs followed the whole job market’s lead spending an average of 15 days online before being filled.

Joblift’s studies show that little notice has been given to artificial intelligence and digitisation in the job advertisements posted in the last year. Only 1 percent of the HR and recruiting vacancies posted stated the need for knowledge of HR and recruiting tools. In comparison, this industry has seen a shift in demands when it comes to candidates. Rather than demanding knowledge of these tools, the HR positions themselves are adapting into more relationship management roles. For example, 45 percent of the vacancies advertised in the last 12 months highlighted the importance of communication and people skills – areas in which artificial intelligence cannot compete.

Read more

Latest News

Read More

Wellbeing pays: the ROI HR can’t ignore

9 October 2025

Skills

7 October 2025

How to build a skills-based strategy

A key challenge for organisations looking at their skills strategy is getting their job data under control. Discover how creating a single source of truth...

Artificial Intelligence, Globalisation

7 October 2025

Talent strategies for business expansion and growth

Global Expansion 2025: Powerful Talent Management Strategies for a Diverse and AI-Driven Workforce....

Newsletter

Receive the latest HR news and strategic content

Please note, as per the GDPR Legislation, we need to ensure you are ‘Opted In’ to receive updates from ‘theHRDIRECTOR’. We will NEVER sell, rent, share or give away your data to third parties. We only use it to send information about our products and updates within the HR space To see our Privacy Policy – click here

Latest HR Jobs

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE