Hiring at the scale DHL faces brings complexity that few organizations will ever experience. In conversation with Avature Founder and CEO Dimitri Boylan, Meredith Wellard shares how DHL balances recruiting automation with local relevance to fill more than 180,000 roles a year. The discussion explores how a thoughtful global recruiting strategy can restore creativity, humanity and joy to recruiting—rather than strip it away.
5 key takeaways from DHL’s HR innovator on automation and global recruiting
- Recruiting automation delivers the greatest value when it frees recruiters up for human work, not when it replaces them.
- A successful global recruiting strategy must remain deeply local, reflecting culture, community and context.
- Standardization enables automation, but flexibility preserves employer brand and candidate experience.
- Over-automation risks diminishing returns, especially in candidate-facing moments that require empathy.
- Treating recruiters as value creators, not cost centers, restores energy and effectiveness to the function.
Automation in Service of a Global, Human Strategy
For Wellard, DHL’s scale makes automation unavoidable, but not unquestionable. With hiring volumes that turn minutes into millions, recruiting automation offers undeniable efficiency gains. Yet she is clear-eyed about the risks of chasing technology for its own sake. Automation works best when applied to repetitive, administrative tasks that drain recruiter time without adding value to candidates. Used this way, it becomes a lever for quality rather than just speed.
That philosophy underpins DHL’s global recruiting strategy. Processes, platforms, and employer branding are designed centrally, where consistency matters, and then localized, where authenticity matters more. A shared data foundation enables DHL to automate intelligently across regions while still empowering local teams to reflect their markets, cultures, and communities. The result is a “glocal” model where global scale strengthens rather than flattens local identity.
Most importantly, automation helps reclaim what Wellard believes recruiting lost along the way: curiosity, creativity and pride. By removing the burden of scheduling, screening logistics and manual coordination, recruiters can return to strategic conversations with hiring managers and candidates alike. In that space, recruiting becomes less transactional and, once again, a role that brings joy.
What happened was that the joy in recruiting got lost somewhere. Automation can give that back.”
Meredith Wellard,
VP of Talent Acquisition, Learning and Growth, DHL
Listen to the full episode to hear Meredith Wellard and Dimitri Boylan discuss recruiting automation, global recruiting strategy, and how DHL is bringing the joy back to recruiting at scale.