AI did not create capability inflation — but it increased the detection lag
By Simon Gray, Vice President, Workforce Solutions
Bottom line
AI changed what a polished hiring process looks like. It did not change what independent execution looks like on a real project. The organizations that close the gap redesign one step — not their entire process.
The performance cliff
A candidate completes the assessment quickly. The answers are polished, the examples precise, the work sample right for the role. They are hired. For the first few days, everything seems fine.
Then something shifts. Tasks take longer than expected. Revisions multiply. When the requirements change, the contractor struggles to adapt. In a live working session, they have trouble explaining the decisions behind their own work.
The manager reaches a conclusion: this person can produce outputs, but cannot reason through the work independently. By then, time has been lost, access has been granted, and the team is absorbing a delivery gap it did not plan for.
What changed — and what did not
Capability inflation is not new. Candidates have always been able to overstate experience and depth. What changed is the detection lag — the distance between when the gap is created and when it becomes visible.
AI-assistance tools let candidates produce polished responses, structured code, and coherent work samples that may not reflect their ability to execute independently in a real project. So the gap that once surfaced in the interview now surfaces after the person has started, gained access, and entered the delivery environment.
This is rarely outright fraud. More often it is a candidate whose confidence in AI-augmented output has outpaced their independent ability. That does not make it harmless — but it does change the response. The issue is not whether the candidate used AI. It is what the hiring process actually proves: can this person do the work under real conditions, or only produce a polished answer in a structured setting?
One validation moment, placed where it matters
A separate post in this series makes the case for a live, interactive capability moment as a defense against identity substitution — confirming the person who interviews is the person who works. The point here is related but distinct. This is not about who the person is. It is about what they can independently do once the AI assistance is removed.
That distinction changes the design. An identity check confirms continuity. A capability check introduces friction the prepared answer cannot survive — a novel problem, a required change mid-task, a request to explain and defend a decision in real time. The candidate who understands the work adapts. The candidate who produced the work with assistance stalls.
This does not need to be heavy. For the roles where independent execution matters most, one well-designed live exercise reveals more than three rounds of polished take-home assessment.
Start here
Identify the roles where independent reasoning — not just deliverable production — is the thing you are actually buying. For those roles, add a single live moment to the process that requires the candidate to think, adapt, and explain in real time.
Leave the rest of the process alone. The goal is not more friction everywhere. It is one moment of real friction in the few roles where the cost of getting it wrong is highest.
Questions to take back to your team
For which of our roles is independent reasoning the real deliverable — and does our process currently test for it? Where would a polished-but-shallow hire cost us the most? Do we have one live moment in our process that a well-prompted answer could not survive?
Next steps
Procom’s Workforce Solutions practice helps programs design role-calibrated capability validation — the kind that distinguishes genuine expertise from a well-prompted result.
To discuss your program’s exposure, get in touch.
Candidate Fraud in Enterprise Hiring

About the author
Simon Gray, Vice President, Workforce Solutions
With over 25 years of experience in strategic staffing, Simon leads Procom’s Workforce Solutions division to help clients hire quickly and compliantly.

