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Recruitment experts dedicated to the Financial Services Industry

Permanent Recruitment - Freelance / Interim Management

The Belgian Financial Services sector is characterized by an ongoing quest for efficiency, digitalization and adaptation to global economic shifts. Amid these evolutions, Financial Institutions face significant recruitment challenges.

High demand for skilled professionals leads to tough competition for top talent. Recruitment in the Financial Services sector in Belgium requires a deep understanding of local and international markets & regulations, as well as anticipation of emerging trends.

Our expertise

We go beyond traditional recruitment in Financial Services. Leveraging cutting-edge digital tools and an extensive industry network, we identify and secure top-tier talent with the expertise and mindset to drive your company’s success.

We understand the unique context, goals, and responsibilities of each position. Our commitment is to present you with a carefully selected shortlist of professionals who not only possess the technical skills but also align with your company culture and the key success factors of the role to be filled.

OUR EXPERTS

A team dedicated to the Financial sector

Our experts specialise in recruiting talent in the Financial Services sector in Belgium and internationally. They have a proven expertise and track record in identifying top talent for various positions within financial institutions.

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Our expertise in recruitment

We recruit on behalf of:

  • Banks (Retail, Private, Corporate, Investment)
  • Asset Managers
  • Insurance (Life & Non-Life) & Reinsurance companies
  • Payment Institutions
  • Leasing companies (B2C & B2B)
  • Fintech (including Regtech & Insurtech)
  • Private Equity & Venture Capital
  • Real Estate Investment companies
  • Family & Multi-Family Offices
  • M&A Boutiques
  • Trusts & Asset Service providers
  • Industry Associations

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Roles for which we recruit:

Leadership

CEO, CFO, CRO, CCO, CMO, CIO, CHRO, COO,...

Strategy

PMO, Program & Project Management, Transformation & Change,...

MarCom

Marketing, Communications, Branding, Campaign Management, ...

Front Office

Private Banker, Portfolio Management, Relationship Management, …

Operations

Middle & Back Office operations , …

Control Functions

Compliance, Risk, Audit, ...

Finance & Reporting

Regulatory Reporting, Actuary, Finance Operations, …

  • What are the latest market trends in the Belgian banking sector?
    Salary survey for banking professions in Belgium in 2025

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  • What are the latest market trends in the Belgian insurance sector?
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    • Our Insurance Salary Survey has been written under the supervision of our recruitment experts and is based on extensive research, including interviews with our candidates and an analysis of our clients' assignments over the last 18 months.
    Salary survey for Insurance professions in Belgium in 2025

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Recruiting for the unknown: how to vet for AI fluency in non-technical roles
MPG UK
/ Categories: en

Recruiting for the unknown: how to vet for AI fluency in non-technical roles

This presents a challenge. Many of these roles did not need AI knowledge until recently. Job descriptions are evolving faster than hiring frameworks. Hiring managers are unsure how to assess AI capability in non-technical specialists.

The goal is not to hire programmers. It’s to identify professionals who understand how AI can support their work, question its outputs, and responsibly use it.

Organisations that learn how to recognise this capability have an advantage. The 2026 LinkedIn Talent Report found that 90% of talent leaders believe teams will be organised around fluid skills rather than rigid job titles.

Why AI fluency now matters in hiring

AI is becoming a general workplace tool rather than a specialist technology. From drafting reports to analysing datasets, AI systems are embedded in everyday business processes. According to the AI Labour Market Survey 2025, 97% of respondents identified at least one AI skills gap.

For non-technical professionals, the key skill is not building AI systems but understanding how to work with them. This includes knowing when AI can speed up a task, when human judgement is needed, and how to interpret results.

In practice, this means an HR manager using AI tools to analyse workforce data, a marketing manager using generative AI to explore campaign ideas or a finance professional using AI to identify patterns in reports.

Employees who understand these tools can work faster, test ideas, and focus more time on strategic thinking.

What AI fluency looks like

AI fluency is misunderstood. It doesn’t mean advanced coding skills or vast technical knowledge. Instead, it reflects a mindset and a set of practical habits.

Candidates with strong AI fluency show curiosity about new tools. They experiment with AI and learn how it can improve their work. They also understand AI’s limits and are cautious about accepting outputs at face value. IBM’s 2025 insights show that 45% of business leaders cite concerns about data accuracy and bias as their top barrier to AI adoption. This means organisations need sceptical users, not only power users.

AI-fluent candidates understand AI bias, the tendency to trust an algorithm’s answer instinctively. The most valuable candidates are those who have a healthy professional scepticism. They treat AI outputs as a draft that needs critical interrogation. They don’t view AI as a final solution.

AI-fluent candidates understand that AI can support decision-making but shouldn’t replace human judgement. This combination of curiosity, critical thinking and responsible use is what organisations should look for.

How to assess AI fluency during recruitment

Traditional interviews rarely reveal whether someone can work effectively with AI. Instead, employers need to introduce ways to test understanding. A useful approach is to focus on behaviour rather than technical knowledge.

AI fluency also encompasses prompt engineering. This is the ability to translate business needs into clear, executable instructions. A candidate doesn't need to write code to be a master prompter. They need to understand the architecture of a good request. This includes:

  • Defining a persona
  • Setting clear constraints
  • Specifying the desired output format

This turns a vague, ambiguous query into an actionable work product.

Ask candidates how they use AI today

One of the simplest questions is often the most revealing. Ask candidates whether they use AI tools in their role and how those tools support their work. Strong candidates will describe examples and explain what they learned from using them. It’s also important to test their level of AI scepticism.

Action points for hiring teams:

  • Ask candidates to describe one task where AI improves their efficiency
  • Explore how they verify the accuracy of AI outputs
  • Ask for examples where they challenged or corrected an AI output
  • Look for examples of experimentation and learning
  • Ask how they determine when a task needs human-in-the-loop intervention
  • Ask for an example of a failed or sub-optimal experiment with AI
  • Ask for an example of a complex prompt they have refined over time (look for candidates who iterate on their instructions to get a better result, rather than accepting the first output from the AI).

Organisations should look for synthetic thinkers. These are professionals who view AI as a junior colleague that needs supervision. It’s dangerous to think that AI is a black box that delivers truth. An AI-fluent candidate doesn't only use AI tools. Instead, they design a human-in-the-loop workflow that combines strategic oversight with machine-generated efficiency. They recognise that while AI helps, it fails in some business areas. Maintaining cultural nuance, creating relationships, gaining stakeholder trust, and making ethically complex trade-offs, remain in the human domain.

Use scenario-based questions

Scenario questions help reveal how candidates think about technology in business situations. For example, ask how they would approach a project where AI analyses large data volumes or create a report draft. The goal is not to test technical detail but to understand how candidates balance speed, judgement and oversight.

Action points for hiring teams:

  • Present a hypothetical scenario where an AI tool gives an answer, they know is incorrect or biased
  • Present a simple business scenario and ask how AI might support the task
  • Ask candidates where human review would still be essential
  • Explore how they would check the reliability of AI-generated outputs
  • Present a vague business request (e.g., ‘Write a report summary’) and ask how they would engineer that prompt to get a more professional or specific result.

Look for learning agility and a growth mindset

AI tools evolve fast. A candidate who uses one platform today may be using something different next year. For this reason, the ability to learn is often more valuable than familiarity with set tools.

Candidates who explore new tech and adapt their workflow tend to develop AI fluency over time. According to LinkedIn's 2026 Talent Report, 93% of talent velocity leaders prioritise human skills such as adaptability alongside AI fluency.

Action points for hiring teams:

  • Ask how candidates stay informed about new technology
  • Explore examples where they adopted a new AI tool
  • Look for evidence of curiosity and continuous learning

Why hiring frameworks need to change

Many recruitment processes focus on experience. In an AI-driven workplace, potential is as important as experience.

The most effective organisations are adjusting their hiring frameworks to account for this. Alongside traditional competencies, organisations assess

  • Digital curiosity
  • Critical thinking
  • Growth mindset
  • Problem-solving ability
  • Adaptability

This approach enables firms to identify professionals who may not yet be AI experts but who can develop with the technology.

The future belongs to AI-aware teams

AI is unlikely to replace professionals. What it will do is reshape how those roles operate. Teams that understand how to work with AI will move faster, test ideas, and focus on higher-value work.

For employers, the challenge is clear. Recruitment strategies must evolve. By focusing on curiosity, critical thinking and learning agility, organisations can identify candidates who are ready for an AI-led workplace.

Ultimately, vetting for AI fluency isn't about identifying future tech wizards; it’s about building a resilient, agile team that can maintain strategic focus while demonstrating machine-speed execution.

Recruiting for AI fluency is not a temporary trend; it’s a permanent change in defining talent. By prioritising candidates who treat AI as a collaborative partner, rather than an automated replacement, organisations aren't only filling jobs; they’re building a workforce. A workforce that is resilient to fast-moving technological change.

 

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EN FAQ Question #1What is AI fluency in non-technical roles?
EN FAQ Answer #1

AI fluency is the ability to use AI tools, understand their limitations and apply human judgement. It does not need coding skills or technical expertise.  

EN FAQ Question #2Why does AI fluency matter in hiring?
EN FAQ Answer #2

AI is now embedded in everyday work. Candidates who understand how to use AI can work faster, test ideas and make better decisions. 

EN FAQ Question #3How can employers assess AI fluency at the interview stage?
EN FAQ Answer #3

Employers can assess AI fluency through behavioural interview questions, practical scenario tasks and examples of how candidates use AI tools in their current role. They are likely to be interested in AI and automation.  

EN FAQ Question #4What does good prompt engineering look like?
EN FAQ Answer #4

Good prompt engineering involves giving AI clear instructions, defining a role or persona, setting constraints and specifying the desired output format.  

EN FAQ Question #5What skills and traits indicate strong AI potential?
EN FAQ Answer #5

Curiosity, critical thinking, adaptability, experimentation and responsible AI use are all strong indicators of AI potential. An interest in technology also helps.  

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