What Is BarRaiser?

By Aaron Cao · Updated

BarRaiser is a hiring platform for employers, not candidates. Its Interview Co-Pilot assists the person conducting the interview with real-time question suggestions, automated notes, and structured scorecards. If you are a candidate, BarRaiser is a tool used on you, not one you install.

BarRaiser is built for the hiring side

BarRaiser is an interview intelligence platform sold to companies. Recruiters, hiring managers, and interviewers are the users. It sits inside the hiring workflow: running structured interviews, recording them, generating notes, and helping a hiring team compare candidates against a consistent rubric.

This is worth stating plainly, because the phrase "interview copilot" is used on both sides of the table. Candidate-side tools, including SubcueAI, help the person answering questions. BarRaiser's copilot helps the person asking them. Searching for one and landing on the other is a common source of confusion, and the comparisons topic hub separates the two categories.

What the Interview Co-Pilot does

If you found BarRaiser while looking for something to help you in your own interview, the natural next question is what it changes about the conversation you are about to have. This section covers the published feature set and who each feature serves. The short version: every one of them points at the interviewer's workflow.

BarRaiser's published capabilities include structured interview templates, an AI Interview Co-Pilot that suggests real-time questions drawn from the candidate's resume and from the conversation as it happens, live interview feedback, automated AI interview notes, and interviewer coaching built on those recordings. The company also sells an interview-as-a-service option, where external technical interviewers run the interview on the employer's behalf.

It advertises integrations with applicant tracking systems, Greenhouse among them, so recordings, notes, and scorecards land in the employer's existing hiring pipeline rather than sitting in a separate tool.

What this means for you as a candidate

Practically, a BarRaiser interview is a recorded, structured interview. A data analyst interviewing for a mid-level role at a retail company may notice that the questions follow a tight rubric, that the interviewer takes few manual notes, and that follow-up questions track her resume closely. That is the copilot working, and it is normal.

Two things follow. First, assume the session is recorded and reviewed later; that is the honest baseline for any platform in this category, and it also means no live assistant is appropriate. Second, structure works in your favor. A rubric-driven interview rewards specific, well-organized answers over improvisation, which is exactly what deliberate practice produces. The mock interview hub covers how to run that practice on your own.

The candidate-side equivalent

SubcueAI is the candidate-side counterpart, and the two products do not overlap. SubcueAI is a native desktop application for macOS and Windows that captures both sides of the conversation locally, transcribes it, and shows suggested answers in a floating local overlay. It does not join the meeting as a bot participant, and the live assistant is not a browser plugin.

The limits are the ones that apply everywhere. If the interview is proctored, if you are sharing your full screen, if the session is recorded, or if you are on a company-managed device, no assistant belongs in it. Where an employer runs a recorded, structured interview, preparation is the tool that actually works, and mock interview practice uses the same question formats a structured rubric draws on.

Aaron Cao, founder of SubcueAI, has kept the product on the candidate side deliberately: the assistant grounds its suggestions in your own resume, which you supply, rather than in a hiring team's rubric. You can build or upload that resume on the resume builder.

FAQ

Is BarRaiser for job candidates?

No. It is sold to employers. Recruiters, hiring managers, and interviewers use it to run and review interviews. As a candidate you never install it or log into it; you simply take an interview that is being run on it.

Does BarRaiser record my interview?

Recording is one of its core features, and its notes, coaching, and review tools are built on those recordings. Treat any BarRaiser interview as recorded and reviewed later.

What is BarRaiser's Interview Co-Pilot?

It is an assistant for the interviewer. It suggests questions in real time, drawn from your resume and from the conversation as it unfolds, and it automates note-taking so the interviewer can focus on the discussion instead of typing.

Can I use an AI interview assistant in a BarRaiser interview?

It is a recorded, structured interview run by the employer, so no live assistant is appropriate. Prepare beforehand instead. Practice against the question formats a structured rubric uses, and go in with specific examples ready.

Is BarRaiser the same as an AI interview bot?

Not quite. A human interviewer stays in the loop and the AI assists them with questions, notes, and scoring. BarRaiser also offers interview-as-a-service, where an external human technical interviewer runs the session for the employer.

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