Overview:
Artificial
intelligence is already influencing employment decisions in many workplaces,
often before HR fully realizes where it is embedded or how much weight it is
carrying. Recruiting platforms, applicant screening tools, assessments,
interview systems, performance software, monitoring tools, and other everyday
HR technologies may now include AI-driven features that affect who gets
considered, how employees are evaluated, and what decisions move forward. In
many organizations, the real risk is not just intentional adoption. It is the
quiet use of AI inside familiar workflows without a clear understanding of the
compliance, documentation, fairness, and oversight issues that follow.
That
is why this topic has become so important for employers in 2026. Some
organizations are actively exploring AI to improve efficiency, consistency, and
speed in recruiting and workforce management. Others have already implemented
AI-enabled tools and assume the vendor has handled the legal and operational
risk. But when technology influences hiring, screening, promotion, discipline,
termination, or other employment actions, the employer still owns the decision
and the consequences. If HR does not understand how the tool functions, what
data it relies on, how outputs are reviewed, or where bias and exclusion can
develop, a tool meant to streamline operations can quickly become a source of
liability.
This
issue also affects a much broader group of HR professionals than many employers
realize. Some HR teams know they are using AI but are unsure how far its
influence extends. Others may not even know whether the systems they rely on
every day contain AI elements at all. Some are trying to move forward carefully
but are overwhelmed by evolving legal standards, vendor claims, and growing
expectations around notice, human oversight, accommodation, and recordkeeping.
The challenge is no longer just whether to use AI. It is whether employers can
recognize where it is shaping decisions and whether they have the controls in
place to use it responsibly.
Join
us for this practical webinar designed for HR professionals who need clear
guidance, not hype. This session will help you understand where AI may already
be affecting employment decisions, where the biggest compliance and governance
gaps are emerging, and what HR should be reviewing right now. Whether your
organization is evaluating new tools, already using AI-enabled systems, or
simply trying to understand hidden exposure in existing HR workflows, this
webinar will provide a more practical framework for identifying risk, asking
better questions, and building more defensible employment practices.
Areas
Covered:
- Why
AI in employment decisions has become an urgent HR issue in 2026
- Where
AI is already embedded across the employment lifecycle, including recruiting,
screening, performance management, promotion, discipline, and termination
- How
early-stage filtering, ranking, and job-ad targeting can shape access to
opportunity before a human review even begins
- The
compliance risks tied to assessments, personality tools, video interview
analysis, and other screening technologies
- How
AI can affect productivity scoring, monitoring, advancement, compensation,
attrition modeling, and layoff decision-making
- Why
disability, accommodation, and accessibility issues remain one of the biggest
blind spots in AI-driven employment processes
- The
federal legal overlay, including how Title VII, the ADA, and the ADEA apply to
AI-influenced decisions
- Key
developments in the state and local patchwork, including notice, bias-audit,
governance, transparency, and impact-assessment requirements
- How
disparate impact can arise even when no one intended to discriminate
- How
proxy variables, historical data, and “assistive” vendor tools can still create
employer liability
- How
to identify which AI tools are higher-risk and require stronger governance and
review
- A
practical vendor due diligence framework, including the questions HR should ask
before relying on AI-driven outputs
- What
meaningful notice, transparency, documentation, and human review should look
like in practice
- Real-world
scenarios and case studies showing where AI use can go wrong and what a better
HR response looks like
- A
practical 30-day action plan for HR teams that need to evaluate current tools,
tighten oversight, and reduce risk now
- Ongoing
monitoring, manager training, audit thinking, and governance steps needed to
support responsible long-term use of AI in employment decisions
Exclusive
Handouts:
- AI in
HR Risk Assessment and Decision-Mapping Workbook
- Vendor
Due Diligence Questionnaire for AI-Enabled HR Tools
Why
Should You Attend?
AI is
already influencing employment decisions in ways many HR teams do not fully
see. From recruiting and screening to performance management, discipline, and
termination, employers may be relying on tools that shape outcomes without
clearly understanding how those outcomes are being generated. This webinar will
help you recognize where AI may already be present in your HR processes and why
that matters from a compliance and risk standpoint.
You
should attend because the legal and operational risks are no longer
theoretical. Employers are facing growing pressure to evaluate bias, ensure
human oversight, address accommodation issues, review vendor claims carefully,
and make sure technology-assisted decisions do not create discrimination,
privacy, or documentation problems. If your organization is already using AI,
considering it, or simply unsure how much of it is embedded in your current
systems, this session will help you ask the right questions before problems
arise.
Most
importantly, this webinar is designed to be practical. Rather than focusing on
hype or abstract discussion, it will give you a clearer framework for
identifying risk, improving oversight, and making better employment decisions
in a fast-changing environment. You will leave with a stronger understanding of
what HR should review now, where caution is needed, and how to approach AI in
employment decisions more confidently and responsibly.
Who
will benefit?
This
webinar is designed for HR, talent, compliance, legal, and people-operations
professionals who help select, manage, oversee, or rely on technology that may
influence employment decisions. It is especially relevant for those responsible
for hiring, screening, performance management, workplace investigations,
documentation, discipline, accommodations, governance, and vendor oversight —
those include:
- Chief
Human Resources Officers/Vice Presidents of Human Resources
- Human
Resources Directors/Senior Human Resources Managers
- Human
Resources Business Partners/Employee Relations Directors/Employee Relations
Managers
- Talent
Acquisition Directors/Talent Acquisition Managers
- Recruiting
Directors/Recruiting Managers
- Staffing
Managers/Workforce Planning Managers
- People
Operations Directors/People Operations Managers
- HR
Operations Directors/HR Operations Managers/HR Compliance Directors
- HR
Compliance Managers/Employment Compliance Managers
- Workplace
Investigations Managers/HR Policy Managers
- HRIS
Directors/HRIS Managers
- People
Analytics Directors/People Analytics Managers
- Compensation
and Performance Management Managers/Learning and Development Directors
- Organizational
Development Managers/Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Directors
- Accommodation
and Leave Managers/In-House Employment Counsel
- Labor
and Employment Counsel/Corporate Compliance Officers
- Risk
Management Directors/Internal Audit Leaders for HR/Employment Processes
- Talent
Technology Directors/HR Technology Managers
- Vendor Risk Managers involved in HR systems
- Recruitment Operations Managers/Talent Intelligence Managers/People Strategy Directors
Eric
Caldwell is an Employment Compliance Advisor with over 20 years of experience
helping organizations manage workplace risk, strengthen employment practices,
and make more defensible HR decisions.
Throughout
his career, Eric has advised employers across a wide range of industries on
some of the most sensitive and high-stakes areas of workforce compliance,
including employee handbook development, multi-state policy alignment, wage and
hour issues, leave administration, workplace investigations, manager
documentation, disciplinary processes, policy enforcement, and employee
relations risk management. In recent years, that work has increasingly included
helping employers think through the compliance and decision-making risks that
arise when AI-enabled tools begin influencing recruiting, screening,
documentation, performance management, and other HR workflows.
Eric is known for his ability to translate complex compliance concerns into practical guidance that employers can apply in day-to-day operations. His sessions focus not only on what the rules require, but on how organizations should review, question, document, and oversee workplace practices when new technologies are introduced into employment decision-making. That practical perspective makes his guidance especially relevant for employers trying to move forward with modern HR tools without losing sight of fairness, consistency, and compliance risk.
Enrollment Options
Tags: AI in HR, Employment Compliance, HR Technology, Recruiting Compliance, AI Risk Management, Hiring and Screening, Workplace Compliance, Employment Decisions, HR Governance, Bias and Discrimination, Human Oversight, Vendor Risk, Performance Management, ADA Compliance, Title VII Compliance, eric caldwell, may 2026, webinar

