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8 min read

How to Analyze an Auto-Generated Candidate Report

Recruitment technology has changed how companies view applicants. Instead of reading hundreds of resumes by hand, you likely use software to process data. This software produces a candidate report for each applicant. This document summarizes skills, experience, and potential fit for the role.

However, having the data is only half the battle. You must know how to read it correctly. If you misinterpret the scores or summaries, you might reject a great applicant or advance the wrong one. This guide explains how to break down these reports using Refhub standards to help you find the right talent.

How to Analyze an Auto-Generated Candidate Report

Key Takeaways

  • Look Beyond the Score: A high overall score does not always mean a perfect fit; check the details.
  • Context Matters: Compare the automated findings with the actual resume or interview notes.
  • Identify Gaps: Use the report to find missing skills you need to ask about during interviews.
  • Speed and Accuracy: Automation speeds up the process, but human review confirms the quality.

What Is an Auto-Generated Candidate Report?

An auto-generated report is a structured summary of a job applicant. Software scans the candidate's application, resume, and sometimes assessment answers. It then organizes this information into a readable format.

The goal is to give you a snapshot of the person without needing to read every line of their CV immediately. These reports usually contain:

  • Overall Match Score: A percentage indicating how well they fit the job description.
  • Skill Analysis: A list of hard and soft skills found in their history.
  • Experience Timeline: A summary of their work history.
  • Communication Style: Insights into how they write or speak based on their application.

You must treat this report as a tool, not the final decision-maker. It highlights where you should look closer.

Understanding the Executive Summary

Most reports start with an executive summary or a "at a glance" section. This is the first place your eyes will land. It typically provides a high-level overview of the applicant.

The Overall Score

This is often a number between 0 and 100. It represents the mathematical match between the keywords in your job description and the words in the candidate's profile.

  • High Score (90-100): Strong keyword match. Likely has the exact titles and skills listed.
  • Mid Score (70-89): Good match. Might miss a few specific terms but has relevant experience.
  • Low Score (<70): Weak match. Either they lack experience, or their resume is formatted poorly.

Automated Insights

The summary may also include bullet points generated by AI. These points explain why the candidate received a certain score.

  • Look for phrases like "Strong history in project management."
  • Note warnings like "Gaps in employment detected."
  • Check for "match capability" notes that link previous roles to your current opening.

Analyzing Specific Grading Metrics

The detailed breakdown of the report relies on specific criteria. To understand the report, you must look at the specific grading metrics used by the system. These metrics usually divide the candidate's profile into distinct categories.

Category Weighting

Not all parts of a report are equal. The system often applies different weights to different sections based on your settings.

  • Experience Duration: How long they held relevant roles.
  • Skill Proficiency: The level of expertise implied by their tasks.
  • Education: Required degrees or certifications.

If a candidate scores low on "Education" but high on "Experience," the overall grade might still be high if you weighted experience more heavily. You need to check which metric pulled the score up or down.

Interpreting Skill Breakdowns and Competencies

This section is often the most valuable part of the document. It lists the specific abilities the candidate possesses.

Hard Skills vs. Soft Skills

The report separates technical abilities from interpersonal traits.

  1. Hard Skills:


    • Software proficiency (e.g., Excel, Python).
    • Languages spoken.
    • Certifications held.
    • Tip: Check if the report marks these as "Self-Reported" or "Verified" through a test.
  2. Soft Skills:


    • Communication.
    • Leadership.
    • Teamwork.
    • Tip: These are harder for AI to grade. The software often infers these from job descriptions in the resume (e.g., "Led a team of five" implies Leadership).

Skill Gaps

The report will likely highlight missing skills.

  • Critical Gaps: Missing requirements that are mandatory for the job.
  • Minor Gaps: Nice-to-have skills that are absent.

Do not disqualify a person immediately due to a minor gap. They can often learn these skills on the job.

Spotting Red Flags and Inconsistencies

Auto-generated reports are excellent at finding patterns that humans might miss. You should pay close attention to the "Warnings" or "Alerts" section.

Common Alerts to Review

  • Employment Gaps: Periods of time not accounted for in the work history.
  • Job Hopping: Short tenures at multiple consecutive jobs.
  • Inconsistent Titles: When a job title does not match the described duties (e.g., "Manager" title but only entry-level tasks listed).
  • Formatting Errors: Issues with the original file that made data extraction difficult.

When you see these flags, do not reject the candidate instantly. Instead, use them as questions for the screening interview. Ask the candidate to explain the gap or the short tenure.

Improving Hiring Decisions with Data

The purpose of the report is to help you make better hiring decisions without wasting time. You should use the data to structure your interview process.

formulating Interview Questions

Use the low-scoring areas to build your question list.

  • If the technical score is low: Ask specific technical questions to verify their knowledge.
  • If the soft skill score is vague: Ask behavioral questions like, "Tell me about a time you resolved a conflict."

Comparing Candidates

Use the reports to compare applicants side-by-side.

  • Look at the "Years of Experience" metric across all top candidates.
  • Compare the "Skill Match" percentages.
  • Review the "Culture Add" potential if your report includes behavioral analysis.

This direct comparison removes bias. You are looking at standardized data rather than being influenced by a fancy resume design.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I trust the auto-generated score completely?

No. The score is a guide, not a final answer. It is based on data matching. A candidate might have great experience but a poorly written resume, leading to a lower score. You should always review the profile personally.

What if the report says "Data Missing"?

This usually means the software could not read the resume format. This happens with complex PDF designs or images. You should open the original resume file to check the information manually.

How do I customize the grading criteria?

Most platforms, including Refhub, allow you to adjust what matters most. You can increase the weight of specific skills or education requirements in the settings before generating the reports.

Making the Final Choice with Confidence

Reading a candidate report effectively requires a balance of trust in the technology and human intuition. You must view the data as a map that guides you to the right information, rather than a judge that decides for you.

By understanding how the scores are calculated and investigating the specific breakdowns of skills and experience, you remove guesswork from the process. This approach allows you to interview the most promising talent and filter out unsuitable matches quickly. Use the report to validate your instincts, ask better questions, and build a stronger team.

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