AINA secures $1M to challenge incumbents in AI hiring
European HRtech startup AINA, positioned as a fast-rising rival to hiring platform Jack & Jill, has raised $1 million in fresh funding to accelerate the rollout of its AI-powered interview platform. The company claims it can reduce time-to-hire by up to 80% while embedding fairness and transparency into every stage of the screening process.
The funding, led by undisclosed early-stage investors, will be used to deepen AI interview capabilities, expand engineering and sales teams, and grow AINA’s presence across Europe and the US. The startup is targeting mid-sized and enterprise employers that are struggling with lengthy recruiting cycles, inconsistent interviews, and growing regulatory pressure around algorithmic bias.
Building a fair alternative to legacy hiring tools
Where many first-generation recruitment platforms focused almost exclusively on volume and automation, AINA is positioning itself as a next-wave solution that combines AI efficiency with explicit safeguards for fair hiring. The platform automates early-stage interviews, but it is designed to standardise questions, scoring, and evaluation criteria so that every candidate is assessed on comparable terms.
Unlike traditional applicant tracking systems that rely heavily on keyword-based CV screening, AINA centres its process on structured, scenario-based interviews. Candidates respond to a mix of video, audio, and written prompts, which are then evaluated by AI models trained to focus on role-relevant skills rather than demographic or background signals.
The company emphasises that its models are continuously audited for potential bias and that hiring teams retain full visibility into how scores are generated. This is a critical differentiator as regulators and candidates increasingly question opaque black-box AI algorithms in recruitment.
How AINA claims to cut time-to-hire by 80%
Automation across the early funnel
AINA targets the most time-consuming parts of the hiring funnel: initial screening, first-round interviews, and basic qualifications checks. Instead of recruiters scheduling and running dozens of repetitive calls, candidates are invited to complete an on-demand, structured interview hosted on AINA’s platform.
The system automatically evaluates responses against role-specific criteria, generating a ranked shortlist for human recruiters. This reduces the need for manual CV reviews and phone screens, which can stretch hiring timelines from weeks to months in high-volume roles.
Standardised, skills-based interviews
AINA’s core proposition is that structured, skills-based interviews are not only fairer but also significantly faster. Employers can configure competency frameworks and question banks aligned to each role. The platform then delivers identical or comparable questions to all applicants, enabling consistent scoring and rapid comparisons.
Because the evaluation process is centralised and standardised, hiring managers can move from raw candidate responses to decision-ready shortlists in hours rather than days. The startup’s internal data, shared with investors, underpins its claim of up to 80% reduction in time-to-hire for early adopters.
Fairness and compliance at the centre of the product
Growing scrutiny around AI in hiring—from both regulators and civil society—has forced HRtech providers to rethink how they design and deploy automation. AINA is leaning into this shift by making fairness and explainability core product features rather than afterthoughts.
Bias-aware AI models
The company says its AI models are trained on carefully curated datasets with explicit controls to reduce the risk of discrimination based on gender, ethnicity, age, or other protected characteristics. Sensitive attributes are excluded from model inputs, and the system is stress-tested to detect patterns that might disadvantage specific groups.
AINA also highlights that it avoids controversial techniques such as analysing facial expressions or accents—methods that have been widely criticised by researchers and regulators for encoding and amplifying structural bias.
Audit trails and transparency
To help employers meet emerging rules on algorithmic accountability, AINA offers detailed audit logs showing how interview scores were generated, which criteria were evaluated, and how candidates compared across the same competency set. Recruiters can review and override AI recommendations, ensuring that human judgment remains central to final hiring decisions.
This transparency is increasingly essential in markets like the EU and several US states, where new regulations and guidance are tightening expectations around the use of automated decision-making tools in employment.
Competing with Jack & Jill and other HRtech heavyweights
By branding itself as a rival to Jack & Jill, one of the better-known names in AI-driven hiring, AINA is signalling its ambition to compete at the top end of the HRtech market. While Jack & Jill and other incumbents have scale and established customer bases, they are also under growing pressure to modernise their technology stacks and address concerns about fairness.
AINA’s strategy is to focus on three pillars: faster hiring, demonstrable fairness, and a user experience tailored to both candidates and recruiters. The startup is pitching itself as a nimble, compliance-ready alternative that can integrate with existing applicant tracking systems rather than forcing a full-stack replacement.
What the funding means for employers and candidates
The new $1 million injection will allow AINA to accelerate product development, including more advanced analytics for talent pipelines, multilingual interview support for global roles, and deeper integrations with HR tools used by large employers.
For employers, the promise is clear: a shorter, more predictable hiring cycle, fewer manual screening hours, and better documentation to support compliance and internal audits. For candidates, the company argues that standardised interviews and transparent scoring can reduce the randomness and bias that often characterise early-stage hiring decisions.
As organisations reassess their recruiting stacks in light of tighter budgets and rising expectations around ethical AI, platforms like AINA are likely to attract increased attention. With fresh funding in hand and a clear focus on fair, fast, and explainable AI interviews, the startup is positioning itself as a serious contender in the next generation of digital hiring tools.

