{
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  "content": {
    "$type": "pub.leaflet.content",
    "pages": [
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        "$type": "pub.leaflet.pages.linearDocument",
        "blocks": [
          {
            "block": {
              "$type": "pub.leaflet.blocks.text",
              "plaintext": "Boolean search wins when you need exact technical matches — a specific certification, a rare framework, a niche tool. AI candidate sourcing wins everywhere else. It finds qualified people who describe their skills differently, come from unexpected industries, or lack the right keywords but have the right abilities. Use both. Just know when to reach for which."
            }
          },
          {
            "block": {
              "$type": "pub.leaflet.blocks.header",
              "level": 2,
              "plaintext": "When to Use Boolean Search vs AI Candidate Sourcing"
            }
          },
          {
            "block": {
              "$type": "pub.leaflet.blocks.text",
              "plaintext": "If you've been recruiting for more than a few years, you've probably written a Boolean search string. Maybe you've wrestled with parentheses, quotation marks, and nested operators just to find candidates with \"Java AND microservices AND NOT intern.\" It works—sometimes. But it also misses most of your talent pool."
            }
          },
          {
            "block": {
              "$type": "pub.leaflet.blocks.header",
              "level": 2,
              "plaintext": "The Boolean Search Foundation: How It Still Works"
            }
          },
          {
            "block": {
              "$type": "pub.leaflet.blocks.text",
              "plaintext": "Boolean search is a recruiter's precision instrument. You build a search string using operators (AND, OR, NOT) and keywords to find candidates whose profiles contain specific terms."
            }
          },
          {
            "block": {
              "$type": "pub.leaflet.blocks.header",
              "level": 2,
              "plaintext": "AI Candidate Sourcing: When It Transforms Your Process"
            }
          },
          {
            "block": {
              "$type": "pub.leaflet.blocks.text",
              "plaintext": "AI candidate sourcing tools work differently. Instead of keyword matching, they use semantic search—understanding meaning rather than exact words. You describe what you want in natural language, and the tool finds candidates who fit the intent, even if their resume doesn't use your exact keywords."
            }
          },
          {
            "block": {
              "$type": "pub.leaflet.blocks.header",
              "level": 2,
              "plaintext": "Concrete Time-to-Shortlist Comparison"
            }
          },
          {
            "block": {
              "$type": "pub.leaflet.blocks.text",
              "plaintext": "Let me show you the actual workflow difference."
            }
          },
          {
            "block": {
              "$type": "pub.leaflet.blocks.text",
              "plaintext": "Read the full post: https://www.klinchapp.com/blog/ai-candidate-sourcing-vs-boolean"
            }
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    ]
  },
  "description": "AI candidate sourcing beats Boolean search in most cases. Learn exactly when each method wins—and how to combine both for faster, smarter hiring.",
  "path": "/blog/ai-candidate-sourcing-vs-boolean",
  "publishedAt": "2026-06-02T12:52:53.825Z",
  "site": "at://did:plc:a4f2ydt43slmk3iyvypgsr3d/site.standard.publication/3mox4gp5kmk2g",
  "tags": [
    "recruitment",
    "hr",
    "ai-tools",
    "hiring"
  ],
  "textContent": "Boolean search wins when you need exact technical matches — a specific certification, a rare framework, a niche tool. AI candidate sourcing wins everywhere else. It finds qualified people who describe their skills differently, come from unexpected industries, or lack the right keywords but have the right abilities. Use both. Just know when to reach for which.\n\nWhen to Use Boolean Search vs AI Candidate Sourcing\nIf you've been recruiting for more than a few years, you've probably written a Boolean search string. Maybe you've wrestled with parentheses, quotation marks, and nested operators just to find candidates with \"Java AND microservices AND NOT intern.\" It works—sometimes. But it also misses most of your talent pool.\n\nThe Boolean Search Foundation: How It Still Works\nBoolean search is a recruiter's precision instrument. You build a search string using operators (AND, OR, NOT) and keywords to find candidates whose profiles contain specific terms.\n\nAI Candidate Sourcing: When It Transforms Your Process\nAI candidate sourcing tools work differently. Instead of keyword matching, they use semantic search—understanding meaning rather than exact words. You describe what you want in natural language, and the tool finds candidates who fit the intent, even if their resume doesn't use your exact keywords.\n\nConcrete Time-to-Shortlist Comparison\nLet me show you the actual workflow difference.\n\nRead the full post: https://www.klinchapp.com/blog/ai-candidate-sourcing-vs-boolean",
  "title": "AI Candidate Sourcing vs Boolean Search: When Each Wins"
}