The latest recruitment campaign from Onepoint is interesting… The firm borrows the codes of dating apps to talk about AI: we “match” candidates with AI agents, as you swipe a profile. MeetIAc, Adopt an AI — the vocabulary is deliberately pop, and the agents take the form of animated mascots, each embodying a skill: data, code, content generation, strategic optimization.
What strikes me is not the gimmick. It’s the setup behind it. The firm relies on Neo, its AI agents platform, which it puts directly into candidates’ hands. The evaluation goes through a serious game — Enigmia — whose scenario involves reestablishing dialogue with AIs that have developed their own language. Designed with the in-house AI Office and a PhD in occupational psychology, the game measures, in one go, technical skills, soft skills, and cultural fit. The campaign, therefore, does not present an abstract promise: it shows the work environment as it already exists.
Three things make it effective, in my view.
It speaks in everyday language — apps, matching, messages — rather than the usual futuristic imagery. It personifies AI, something few B2B brands still dare to do. And it delivers a clear message to candidates: here, we work with these agents, not alongside them.
The baseline sums up well the balance sought: our agents have the power, you have the talent. Complementarity rather than replacement—and this is the nuance that, for me, changes everything in how it’s received. The bet is borne out by the numbers as well: 1,200 recruitments targeted in 2026, including 800 in France, and 100% of candidates evaluated on their ability to work with AI.
I’m sharing it because it’s exactly the kind of case worth examining: to study, to critique, probably to copy.
#AI #AIagents #recruitment #employerbranding #advertising #B2B #strategicplanning #creativity
Source: jai-un-pote-dans-la.com