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Research7 min read

What ATS Users Actually Want: Insights From 500 Recruiters

IK

Idan Kars

Founder, VeScout · February 28, 2026

The Survey: 500 Recruiters, 30 Questions, One Clear Message

Earlier this year, we surveyed 500 in-house recruiters across industries and company sizes about their experience with applicant tracking systems. We asked about their current tools, daily workflows, biggest frustrations, and wish lists for the future. The responses were illuminating — and surprisingly consistent regardless of company size or ATS vendor.

The headline finding: 78% of recruiters said their ATS creates more work than it eliminates. That is a damning statistic for an entire software category. The tools designed to make recruiting more efficient are, in the eyes of their users, doing the opposite.

Let us dig into the details.

Frustration #1: Manual Data Entry (Cited by 84% of Respondents)

The number one complaint was manual data entry. Recruiters spend hours entering candidate information, updating pipeline stages, logging interview feedback, and maintaining records. Despite having an ATS, much of this work still requires human input.

The root cause is that most ATS platforms are databases with a user interface on top. They store information but do not process it intelligently. A recruiter uploads a resume and the ATS stores it — but it does not extract the key information, score the candidate, or suggest where they fit in the pipeline. That interpretation layer still falls on the human.

One respondent put it bluntly: "My ATS is a $40,000-a-year filing cabinet. I do all the actual thinking and sorting myself." This sentiment appeared again and again in different words. Recruiters want tools that work with them, not tools that make them do the work.

Frustration #2: Resume Screening Takes Too Long (71%)

Nearly three-quarters of recruiters said resume screening is their biggest time sink. The average recruiter in our survey reported spending 6-10 hours per week reviewing resumes manually, even with keyword-based ATS filtering in place.

The problem with keyword filtering is that it is both too broad and too narrow. Search for "Python" and you get candidates who listed it as a secondary skill five years ago. Miss a candidate who used "data engineering" instead of your exact keyword "ETL developer" and you lose a great match. Recruiters end up reading most resumes anyway because they do not trust the filters.

What recruiters want instead is intelligent screening that understands context. Not keyword matching, but actual comprehension of what a resume says and how it maps to job requirements. AI-powered screening that can tell the difference between a candidate who led a team of 10 engineers and one who was an intern on a 10-person team.

Frustration #3: Scheduling Is a Nightmare (68%)

Interview scheduling was the third most cited frustration. Despite the existence of scheduling integrations, 68% of recruiters said coordinating interviews still involves significant back-and-forth communication.

The issue is that scheduling is not just about finding an open calendar slot. It involves coordinating multiple interviewers across time zones, respecting panel preferences, accounting for candidate availability, handling last-minute changes, and sending all the right information to all the right people. Most ATS scheduling integrations handle the calendar part but not the coordination part.

Recruiters told us they want one-click scheduling that handles the entire workflow: checks availability, proposes times, sends invitations, handles responses, manages reschedules, sends reminders, and shares interview preparation materials. Currently, most of this is manual.

Frustration #4: Reports Are Useless (62%)

This one surprised us slightly. Sixty-two percent of recruiters said the reporting in their ATS is either insufficient or too complex to be useful. Many said they export data to spreadsheets to do any meaningful analysis.

The fundamental problem is that ATS reports are built around system metrics — applications received, stage conversion rates, time in stage — rather than business questions. A VP of Talent does not want to know that they had 347 applications last month. They want to know: Are we going to fill the Senior Engineer role by the end of the quarter? Which sourcing channels are actually producing hires? Why is our offer acceptance rate dropping?

Answering those questions requires combining data, understanding context, and presenting insights in natural language. Traditional dashboards with charts and filters cannot do this. Recruiters want to ask questions in plain English and get answers that include both data and interpretation.

Frustration #5: Poor Candidate Experience (58%)

More than half of recruiters acknowledged that their ATS contributes to poor candidate experience. Application forms are too long. Status updates are infrequent or nonexistent. Rejection emails are generic. The career page looks like it was designed in 2010.

This is particularly painful because recruiters know that candidate experience directly affects their ability to hire. In a competitive talent market, a slow or impersonal hiring process can cost you top candidates. But improving candidate experience within the constraints of a legacy ATS is extremely difficult.

Recruiters want tools that automatically keep candidates informed, personalize communication, and make the application process as frictionless as possible. They want career pages that reflect their brand, not their ATS vendor's default template.

The Wish List: What Recruiters Actually Want

When we asked recruiters to describe their ideal recruiting tool, the responses clustered around five themes. First, automation of repetitive tasks — screening, scheduling, status updates, and data entry should happen without human intervention. Second, intelligence — the tool should understand resumes, job requirements, and market context, not just store data. Third, simplicity — less clicking, fewer tabs, more conversational interaction. Fourth, speed — everything should feel instant, from posting a job to getting a pipeline report. Fifth, integration — one tool that does it all, rather than a Frankenstack of six different platforms.

Interestingly, the wish list almost perfectly describes what AI-native recruiting platforms are building. The gap between what recruiters want and what legacy ATS platforms offer is exactly the space where AI agents add value.

What This Means for the ATS Market

The ATS market is at an inflection point. The tools that dominated the last decade — Greenhouse, Lever, iCIMS, Workday Recruiting — are all scrambling to add AI features. But retrofitting AI onto a system designed as a database is fundamentally different from building an AI-native platform from the ground up.

When you bolt AI onto an existing ATS, you get AI-assisted screening as an add-on, AI-suggested email templates, maybe an AI chatbot for candidates. These are incremental improvements.

When you build AI-native from day one, you get a fundamentally different experience. The AI is not an add-on — it is the core. You tell it what you need and it executes. It does not show you a dashboard and ask you to click through it. It does the work and shows you the results.

Our Take

We built VeScout specifically to address the frustrations uncovered in this survey. Not because we think recruiters are doing a bad job — they are doing an incredible job despite their tools, not because of them. We built it because those 500 recruiters deserve better.

Every feature in VeScout maps directly to a frustration in this data. AI screening replaces manual resume review. Automated scheduling eliminates email coordination. Natural language reporting answers questions instantly. And the chat-first interface means no more clicking through 17 tabs to do one thing.

The message from 500 recruiters is clear: they do not want more features. They want less work. And that is exactly what AI agents deliver.

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