Every application read, summarized, and compliance-checked
For a recruitment or labour-hire company — applications and CVs landing all day in a shared inbox.
A candidate applies for a forklift operator role. Right now a coordinator opens the file, reads it, works out whether they hold a current forklift ticket, checks their right to work, decides which role or pool they fit, then types a summary into your system. Ten minutes of reading and re-keying for a one-page CV — times every application that comes in.
One way it plays out
- Every application gets read and written up automatically — even a scanned ticket or a phone photo of a licence — and sorted by what the CV actually says (a warehouse/forklift candidate, not a driver or an office role), not by guessing from a filename.
- Compliance gaps surface on their own — an expired forklift ticket or a missing right-to-work document gets flagged now, instead of being noticed three weeks later on site.
- A ready-to-use summary lands in your inbox — name and contact, role applied for, skills and tickets with expiry dates, right-to-work status, and a link back to the CV — ready to drop into your recruitment system.
That's one way it plays out — the categories, the tickets you check for, and the compliance flags get shaped around the roles you actually place.
So the coordinator opens a clean summary instead of a raw CV, and every Friday a rollup shows how many applications came in by trade, which still need follow-up, and which were flagged — like that expired ticket, sitting at the top of the list instead of buried in a folder of CVs.
Works for: recruitment and labour-hire companies, CV and application triage, and candidate compliance logging.
Everything stays on servers here in Canada, and once it's built the whole thing is yours to keep — not a subscription, and not tied to anyone's platform. I'm here in Winnipeg: I set it up, and I stay with you and your team until it's running the way you want.
Curious how it's built? Technical breakdown available on request.