How AI Shapes Career Development

Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.

  • View profile for Ricardo Cuellar

    HR Exec | HR Coach, Mentor & Keynote Speaker • Helping HR grow • Follow for posts about people strategy, HR life, and leadership

    22,499 followers

    Think AI will steal your HR Job? Ignore AI and its capabilities and you'll create a self-fulfilling prophecy. Don't fear it, learn it. Here’s how AI is changing HR and what you need to do to stay relevant. 1. AI Is Revolutionizing Recruiting 📌 What’s changing: AI-powered tools are screening resumes, scheduling interviews, and assessing candidates faster than ever. ⚠️ What it means for HR: Recruiters who rely on outdated manual processes will struggle to keep up. ✅ How to stay relevant: Learn how to use AI-driven ATS (e.g., HireVue, Paradox, Eightfold AI). Use AI to reduce bias in hiring (but don’t trust it blindly—always audit AI decisions). Focus on candidate experience—AI can automate tasks, but humans build relationships. 2. AI Is Reshaping Employee Engagement & Retention 📌 What’s changing: AI can analyze employee sentiment, predict turnover risks, and personalize engagement strategies. ⚠️ What it means for HR: If you’re still guessing why employees leave, you’re behind. ✅ How to stay relevant: Use AI-powered surveys (e.g., Peakon, Culture Amp) to track engagement in real-time. Leverage AI to identify burnout risks before they become resignations. Balance AI insights with human connection—people don’t want to be managed by algorithms. 3. AI Is Streamlining HR Operations 📌 What’s changing: AI is automating HR paperwork, compliance tracking, and benefits administration. ⚠️ What it means for HR: If you’re spending hours on admin work, AI can do it faster. ✅ How to stay relevant: Learn AI-powered HRIS tools (e.g., Workday AI, BambooHR, UKG). Automate onboarding workflows to free up time for strategic HR. Shift from HR admin to HR strategy—let AI handle the paperwork. 4. AI Is Changing Learning & Development 📌 What’s changing: AI is personalizing training, recommending career paths, and predicting skill gaps. ⚠️ What it means for HR: Generic, one-size-fits-all training is dead. ✅ How to stay relevant: Explore AI-driven LMS platforms (e.g., Coursera for Business, LinkedIn Learning). Use AI to create tailored career development plans for employees. Focus on coaching and leadership development—AI can teach skills, but humans mentor. 5. AI Is Transforming HR Analytics 📌 What’s changing: AI can predict workforce trends, analyze DEI progress, and optimize workforce planning. ⚠️ What it means for HR: If you’re only looking at past HR data, you’re missing out on AI’s ability to forecast trends. ✅ How to stay relevant: Learn AI-powered HR analytics tools (e.g., Visier, ChartHop). Use predictive analytics to forecast turnover, pay gaps, and hiring needs. Partner with finance and operations—data-driven HR pros will lead the future. The best HR pros won’t fear AI, they’ll learn how to use it. Agree or disagree? ⬇️ ♻️ Repost to inspire change in your network. ➕ Follow Ricardo Cuellar for more content like this.

  • View profile for Andreas Sjostrom
    Andreas Sjostrom Andreas Sjostrom is an Influencer

    LinkedIn Top Voice | AI Agents | Robotics I Vice President at Capgemini's Applied Innovation Exchange | Author | Speaker | San Francisco | Palo Alto

    13,379 followers

    Harvard just dropped a study on AI and the workforce: "Generative AI as Seniority-Biased Technological Change: Evidence from U.S. Resume and Job Posting Data." It perfectly complements Stanford’s report, published only a a few days earlier. Together, these are the clearest signals yet of how Generative AI is not just changing productivity; it’s reshaping the very architecture of careers. Stanford (ADP payroll data): Since late 2022, employment among 22–25 year-olds in AI-exposed jobs has fallen ~13%, while 35–49 year-olds in the same roles have grown ~9%. Automation-heavy AI uses cut junior jobs; augmentation-heavy ones sustain or even expand them. Harvard (62M workers, 285K firms): At firms that adopt AI (measured via “AI integrator” hires), junior headcount falls 7.7% within six quarters. Hiring slows by ~10% per quarter, even as promotions rise 5%. In Wholesale & Retail, junior hiring contracts by nearly 40%. And graduates from mid-tier universities are the hardest hit. The message is clear: AI is shrinking the base of the career ladder; fewer entry roles, faster promotions for those already inside, and a premium on tacit, senior-level capabilities. The opportunity is differentiation. Companies that design AI-augmented apprenticeships, run talent impact diagnostics, and adopt augmentation-first operating models will not only protect their pipelines but also build the next generation of leaders faster. It seems like AI isn’t just an efficiency story. It’s a career architecture story. Those who act intentionally now will set the tone for an AI-powered workforce that is leaner, smarter, and more resilient. 🔗 Link to Harvard's report ("Generative AI as Seniority-Biased Technological Change: Evidence from U.S. Resume and Job Posting Data"): http://bit.ly/47SyfTC 🔗 Link to Stanford's report ("Canaries in the Coal Mine?"): http://bit.ly/45Ttgzo

  • View profile for Glen Cathey

    Advisor, Speaker, Trainer; AI, Human Potential, Future of Work, Sourcing, Recruiting

    66,636 followers

    Key takeaways from Mary Meeker's (340 page!) 2025 AI Trends report: 1. The Job market is actively reshaping with data showing a dramatic divergence in the labor market. Since January 2018, job postings in the USA requiring AI skills have skyrocketed by +448%, while non-AI IT job postings have declined by -9%. 2. It's about augmentation AND replacement. While the cliche that "You're not going to lose your job to an AI, but you're going to lose your job to somebody who uses AI" may be somewhat true, it's also true that companies are exploring agents to perform work, and this will have an impact on human jobs. HR and L&D need to really kick upskilling and integration into gear, empowering the workforce to use AI as a tool for productivity. 3. Company mandates on AI use are becoming the norm. Leading tech companies are no longer suggesting AI adoption - they're requiring it. Shopify now considers "reflexive AI usage" a "baseline expectation" for all employees. Duolingo is officially "AI-first," stating that AI use will be part of performance reviews and that new headcount will only be approved if a team cannot first automate its work. AI strategy starts at the top and leaders need to lead by example. 4. Employees are already seeing the benefits of AI - a survey of employed U.S. adults found that over 72% of those using AI chatbots at work say the tools are "extremely" or "very" helpful for doing things more quickly and improving the quality of their work. No surprise there, with the exception that perhaps the number should be higher than 72%. 5. The next generation of talent is AI-Native. Today's students are already leveraging AI for career readiness. A survey of 18-24 year-olds showed top use cases for ChatGPT include starting projects, summarizing texts, and career-related writing. Recruitment and onboarding strategies must adapt to a talent pool that expects AI tools from day one. So what does this all mean for HR and Talent leaders? This report signals a clear need to: 🚀 Rethink job descriptions & skill requirements - are you hiring for AI literacy? 🚀 Transform L&D - is your upskilling strategy focused on experiential learning and practical AI application or is it limited to online learning? 🚀 Update performance management - how will you measure and reward effective AI usage? 🚀 Adapt recruiting - how are you preparing to attract and retain an AI-native workforce? I don't think you can afford to take a "wait and see" approach. What are you and your company doing to get ahead and take full advantage of the benefits AI has to offer? Check out the full report here: https://lnkd.in/ed7j4Wi7 #AI #FutureOfWork #HumanResources #TalentAcquisition #Leadership

Explore categories