Last month, I brought on two new contractors. It wasn’t a huge hiring spree, but even for two people, the paperwork and setup felt like a full-time job. Offer letters, background checks, onboarding documents, setting up access to various systems – it’s a grind. I’m a solo founder; I don’t have an HR department. So, I’ve been experimenting with automating HR processes with AI to keep my head above water. This isn’t about some theoretical future; it’s about what I’m actually using, what I’ve paid for, and what’s genuinely saving me time right now. Forget the marketing fluff. Let’s talk about the dirty details.
The Onboarding Headache (and How AI Helps)
The onboarding process is a classic time sink. Before AI, I’d manually draft offer letters, send out a dozen different forms, chase signatures, and then spend hours setting up accounts. It was tedious, prone to errors, and frankly, a terrible first impression for new team members.
Now, when a new hire accepts an offer, a few things kick off automatically. I use a simple form builder (like Typeform) to collect initial data. That data then feeds into an automation platform, often Zapier, which I’ve found indispensable for connecting disparate systems. Zapier takes the new hire’s name and email, then triggers a sequence. First, it populates a template in Google Docs for the offer letter and contractor agreement. I still review and sign these, of course, but the initial drafting is done.
Next, it sends an email with a link to a secure portal for document uploads – things like ID verification and tax forms. This portal uses some basic AI-powered OCR (Optical Character Recognition) to scan and categorize documents. It’s not perfect, but it flags missing fields or blurry images, which saves me from chasing down incomplete paperwork later. I’ve tried a few of these services; some are better than others at handling varied document types. The one I’m currently using, DocuSense AI, costs me about $49/month for a low volume of documents, and honestly, it’s fair for the time it saves. It’s not a huge cost, but it adds up if you’re not careful.
Another part of the onboarding flow involves setting up access. Zapier again comes into play, creating accounts in Slack, Asana, and our internal knowledge base. It’s not full-blown identity management, but for a small team, it’s enough. The biggest win here is consistency. Every new hire gets the same initial setup, the same welcome messages, and the same access permissions. No more forgetting to add someone to a crucial channel or giving them the wrong role. This consistency alone makes the investment worthwhile.
I also use ChatGPT (the paid version, GPT-4) to draft initial welcome messages, create a personalized onboarding checklist based on their role, and even generate short training snippets for common tools. I feed it the job description and some company context, and it spits out surprisingly good first drafts. It’s not writing the whole thing, but it gives me a solid starting point, saving me at least an hour per new hire on content creation. This isn’t about replacing human interaction; it’s about offloading the repetitive, low-value tasks so I can focus on the actual human connection. That first video call, the introduction to the team – those are still my job, and they’re more effective when I’m not stressed about missing paperwork.
Beyond Onboarding: Other HR Automation Wins
Onboarding is just one piece of the puzzle. I’ve found other areas where AI and automation Make.coma real difference. Take leave requests, for instance. Previously, it was an email chain, a spreadsheet update, and a calendar block. Now, a simple form submission (again, Typeform) triggers an approval workflow. If it’s a standard vacation request within policy limits, it gets pre-approved and added to a shared calendar automatically. If it’s something more complex, it flags it for my review. This isn’t rocket science, but it cuts down on back-and-forth emails dramatically.
Another area is policy queries. People always have questions about benefits, company holidays, or expense policies. Instead of me answering the same questions repeatedly, I’ve built a simple internal knowledge base using Notion. I then connected a basic chatbot (using Chatbase.co) to this Notion database. Employees can ask the chatbot questions, and it pulls answers directly from the documented policies. It’s not perfect, sometimes it misunderstands a query, but it handles about 70% of the common questions without my intervention. That’s a concrete love right there: getting those repetitive questions off my plate. It frees up my mental bandwidth for more strategic tasks, or just, you know, actually doing my core job.
I’ve also used AI for preliminary screening of job applications. When I post a role, I get dozens, sometimes hundreds, of resumes. Manually sifting through them is brutal. I use an Applicant Tracking System (ATS) that has some built-in AI capabilities. It scans resumes for keywords, experience, and even flags potential red flags based on predefined criteria. It doesn’t make hiring decisions, obviously, but it helps me narrow down the initial pool to a manageable number. It’s like having a very fast, very literal assistant doing the first pass. This isn’t about bias, it’s about efficiency in a high-volume task. I still review every candidate the AI flags as a potential fit, but I’m not wasting time on applications that clearly don’t meet the basic requirements.
Performance review preparation is another one. Gathering feedback from multiple sources, compiling self-assessments, and drafting initial review documents used to take hours. Now, I use a system that collects peer feedback through structured forms. AI then helps summarize this feedback, highlighting key themes and areas for development. It doesn’t write the review itself, but it provides a concise summary of all inputs, making my job of writing the actual review much faster. It’s a tool for synthesis, not creation, and that’s where it shines.