Zoom has taken another step in its transformation from a video-calling service into a full AI-driven workplace platform with the acquisition of BrightHire, the interview intelligence firm founded in 2019.
The move expands Zoom Workplace into one of the most critical and historically manual business functions: hiring.
It also continues a period of steady expansion for Zoom, which in recent years has added Workvivo and Bonsai to its portfolio as it positions itself as a comprehensive hub for communication, collaboration and now talent acquisition.
Announcing the acquisition, Zoom Chief Strategy Officer Abhisht Arora highlighted the importance of hiring conversations to many businesses and the crucial role Zoom already plays in facilitating them.
“Each year, millions of these moments that shape and define teams take place on the Zoom platform,” he wrote.
He added that customers “trust us for their most important, high-stakes conversations” and that BrightHire enhances these interactions by providing structured intelligence, automation and insight to help organisations make better hiring decisions.
Why BrightHire?
BrightHire, already an established player in the interview intelligence space, provides an end-to-end suite of tools that enhance how organisations plan, conduct and assess interviews.
The company is trusted by a roster of well-known businesses including Canva, Duolingo, Instacart, Lucid Group, Ramp, SoFi and HCA Healthcare.
Zoom has emphasised that the acquisition is both an expansion of its platform and a natural extension of its existing capabilities.
The two companies have been closely linked since 2021, when Zoom became an investor and began building integrations that enabled customers to use BrightHire directly within Zoom calls.
Expanding Zoom Workplace
Zoom Workplace, introduced in 2024, is Zoom’s more expansive vision of the unified platform of the future.
It brings together instant messaging, video calls, virtual whiteboards, scheduling, room reservations and employee communications.
The platform sits alongside the Zoom AI Companion, the agentic assistant that now operates across Zoom products to provide summarisation, coaching, planning and automation capabilities.
BrightHire could fit neatly into this larger ecosystem.
Arora described BrightHire as “a natural extension” of Zoom Workplace because it enhances one of the most vital workflows for any growing organisation.
“We’re creating a seamless talent journey from discovering and hiring the right people to inspiring and engaging them once they join.”
The acquisition supports a talent lifecycle that begins with discovering and interviewing candidates and continues through onboarding and employee engagement with Workvivo.
The platform covers everything from interview planning and scheduling to AI-supported job descriptions, hiring plans, automated screening interviews, recording and transcription, summarisation, feedback workflows and coaching insights.
Importantly, BrightHire’s approach emphasises augmenting human decision-making rather than replacing it, a value Zoom has repeatedly stressed in its own AI roadmap.
The company’s commitment to responsible AI aligns with Zoom’s strategy as well. Arora pointed out that one of BrightHire’s core values is to “put candidates first,” which sits comfortably within Zoom’s wider focus on trust, transparency and user-centred design.
By integrating BrightHire into Zoom Workplace, the company is aiming to provide a more consistent and intelligent experience for both interviewers and candidates while keeping humans firmly in control of hiring outcomes.
A Strategic Move
The acquisition arrives at a time when hiring teams are increasingly seeking tools that reduce administrative burden, improve consistency and provide data-driven insights.
Many organisations still rely on ad-hoc interview processes, scattered notes and subjective assessments, which can make hiring slow, inconsistent and prone to bias.
BrightHire aims to address this by embedding intelligence into every stage of the hiring journey.
Arora explained that BrightHire “empowers leading talent teams to leverage the intelligence embedded in every interview, driving measurable improvements in both quality of hire and process efficiency.”
This echoes a broader shift in HR technology, where the emphasis is moving from sourcing large candidate pools toward making better decisions once candidates are already in the pipeline.
BrightHire Co-Founder and CEO Benjamin Sesser also commented on the significance of the acquisition, calling it “an exciting new chapter – one that accelerates our mission to give everyone the hiring experience they deserve, backed by Zoom’s scale, resources, and world-class technology.”
He added that the combination of the two companies will “transform how the world hires,” reinforcing BrightHire’s belief that the integration will allow it to reach more teams, roles and candidates than before.
What Customers Can Expect
For current BrightHire customers, the company has emphasised that the platform they use today will remain intact.
It will continue to operate as a standalone brand within Zoom, similar to Workvivo. At the same time, customers will benefit from Zoom’s broader infrastructure, including increased reliability, scalability and security.
According to BrightHire, this will also allow the company to execute its product roadmap more quickly and expand its reach into new markets and user groups.
Zoom customers, meanwhile, will see BrightHire capabilities introduced into the Workplace platform after the transaction closes in the coming weeks.
These capabilities include interview planning tools, automated insights, real-time coaching during interviews and enhanced data-driven hiring decision support.
For organisations already embedded in Zoom’s ecosystem, this could create a more seamless process from initial conversations to final hiring decisions.