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Is Gen Z Truly Lacking Work Ethic, or Are Organizations Falling Behind?
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
12 hours ago
29 min read
The Epistemic Transformation: Reimagining Higher Education in the Age of Generative AI
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
2 days ago
22 min read
Preparing Organizations for AI's Economic Disruption: Evidence-Based Strategies for Workforce Transition and Strategic Adaptation
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
3 days ago
31 min read
Designing Human-Machine Collaboration: Strategic Imperatives for the AI-Powered Workplace
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
4 days ago
34 min read
Bridging the Education-to-Employment Divide: What Employers Really Want from Higher Education
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
5 days ago
15 min read
When Human Judgment Must Lead: Strategic Boundaries for AI in Management
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
6 days ago
24 min read
When the Escape Routes Close: Why AI-Driven Displacement May Break the Historical Pattern
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
7 days ago
33 min read
I-O Psychology and Organized Labor: Bridging a Century-Long Divide to Advance Worker Wellbeing and Organizational Effectiveness
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
Jun 13
25 min read
Bridging the Leadership Development Gap: Evidence-Based Strategies for Sustainable Transfer of Learning
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
Jun 12
13 min read
When Artificial Intelligence Confronts the Unknown: ARC-AGI-3 and the Future of Adaptive Intelligence
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
Jun 11
16 min read
Human Capital Leadership Review
U.S. Companies Take 7.2 Months to Recover Culture Post-Layoff, Says New Research
10 hours ago
3 min read
Is Gen Z Truly Lacking Work Ethic, or Are Organizations Falling Behind?
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
12 hours ago
29 min read
The Epistemic Transformation: Reimagining Higher Education in the Age of Generative AI
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
2 days ago
22 min read
Preparing Organizations for AI's Economic Disruption: Evidence-Based Strategies for Workforce Transition and Strategic Adaptation
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
3 days ago
31 min read
Pebl Says the HR Chatbot Era Is Ending as Alfie Evolves from Assistant to Workforce Agent
3 days ago
3 min read
More Than Half of Young US Hospitality Workers Would Give Up 5% Pay Raise to Feel More Confident
3 days ago
2 min read
Clarecast Releases ‘The Quiet Restructuring’ Report, Revealing the AI-Driven Workforce Contraction Hidden From Official Jobs Data
3 days ago
3 min read
Nearly Half of Working Dads Have Used Their Kids as an Excuse to Leave Work Early, New Survey Reveals
3 days ago
4 min read
10 Jobs Where Your Salary Climbs Fastest Over a Career, Study Reveals
3 days ago
4 min read
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HCL Review Research Videos
HCL Review Research Infographics
Blog: HCI Blog
Human Capital Leadership Review
Featuring scholarly and practitioner insights from HR and people leaders, industry experts, and researchers.
Human Capital Innovations
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04:52
Unlocking Gen Z Potential in the AI Era!
This research examines how agentic AI is transforming corporate structures and the specific role of early-career talent in this transition. While many companies are currently reducing entry-level hiring due to automation, the research argues that junior workers are actually vital assets for managing and refining AI systems. Organizations that successfully integrate these workers into "AI Builder" roles or updated apprenticeship models often see significant productivity gains compared to those that simply replace humans with software. The research highlights that human judgment and oversight remain essential, as senior staff often lack the time for the iterative experimentation required to master these new tools. By formalizing AI career pathways and distributed governance, firms can build a sustainable pipeline of expertise that secures a long-term competitive advantage. Ultimately, the research advocates for a strategic talent investment that views the next generation as necessary collaborators rather than expendable costs.
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04:33
The AI Builder Blueprint
This research examines how agentic AI is transforming corporate structures and the specific role of early-career talent in this transition. While many companies are currently reducing entry-level hiring due to automation, the research argues that junior workers are actually vital assets for managing and refining AI systems. Organizations that successfully integrate these workers into "AI Builder" roles or updated apprenticeship models often see significant productivity gains compared to those that simply replace humans with software. The research highlights that human judgment and oversight remain essential, as senior staff often lack the time for the iterative experimentation required to master these new tools. By formalizing AI career pathways and distributed governance, firms can build a sustainable pipeline of expertise that secures a long-term competitive advantage. Ultimately, the research advocates for a strategic talent investment that views the next generation as necessary collaborators rather than expendable costs.
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21:32
The Strategic Case for Early-Career Talent in the Age of Agentic AI
Abstract: Organizations across industries are restructuring in response to generative AI and agentic systems, yet reactions diverge sharply. While many firms reduce early-career hiring amid automation fears, leading organizations recognize that junior talent represents a strategic asset for AI-enabled transformation. This article examines the emerging organizational architecture driven by agentic AI adoption, analyzes the distinctive capabilities early-career workers bring to AI-augmented environments, and synthesizes evidence-based strategies for leveraging Gen Z talent as organizational builders rather than expendable overhead. Drawing on recent workforce data, capability frameworks, and organizational case studies across technology services, financial services, and professional services sectors, the article presents a practitioner-oriented roadmap for restructuring talent strategies around the apprenticeship model, distributed AI governance, and capability-building systems that position early-career talent as core to competitive advantage in AI-intensive operations. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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21:41
A Debate about the Strategic Case for Early-Career Talent in Agentic AI
This research examines how agentic AI is transforming corporate structures and the specific role of early-career talent in this transition. While many companies are currently reducing entry-level hiring due to automation, the research argues that junior workers are actually vital assets for managing and refining AI systems. Organizations that successfully integrate these workers into "AI Builder" roles or updated apprenticeship models often see significant productivity gains compared to those that simply replace humans with software. The research highlights that human judgment and oversight remain essential, as senior staff often lack the time for the iterative experimentation required to master these new tools. By formalizing AI career pathways and distributed governance, firms can build a sustainable pipeline of expertise that secures a long-term competitive advantage. Ultimately, the research advocates for a strategic talent investment that views the next generation as necessary collaborators rather than expendable costs. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Play Video
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55:17
A Conversation about the Strategic Case for Early-Career Talent in Agentic AI
This research examines how agentic AI is transforming corporate structures and the specific role of early-career talent in this transition. While many companies are currently reducing entry-level hiring due to automation, the research argues that junior workers are actually vital assets for managing and refining AI systems. Organizations that successfully integrate these workers into "AI Builder" roles or updated apprenticeship models often see significant productivity gains compared to those that simply replace humans with software. The research highlights that human judgment and oversight remain essential, as senior staff often lack the time for the iterative experimentation required to master these new tools. By formalizing AI career pathways and distributed governance, firms can build a sustainable pipeline of expertise that secures a long-term competitive advantage. Ultimately, the research advocates for a strategic talent investment that views the next generation as necessary collaborators rather than expendable costs. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Personalized Adaptive Workplace Learning and Assessment, with Luis Garcia
In this HCI Webinar, I talk with Luis Garcia about personalized adaptive workplace learning and assessment. Luis Garcia is a seasoned international executive with over 25 years of experience in technology, digital media, and education. He specializes in driving new ventures and products to rapid growth by building effective teams that harness innovation, technology, and creativity to solve complex problems. He is the president of PETE, an Orlando-based tech startup that offers a suite of cost-effective and customizable solutions that enable organizations to deliver personalized workforce learning at scale. The PETE team is dedicated to harnessing the power of AI to help organizations of all sizes optimize their training initiatives, spanning from onboarding to regulatory compliance, product knowledge, technical skills, and more, without hiring additional training resources.
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04:17
The Remote Work–AI Paradox Why Early Career Hiring is Declining
Since late 2022, entry-level job opportunities in key sectors such as technology, finance, and marketing have declined sharply in countries like the US, UK, and Canada. The proportion of these roles awarded to early-career professionals has dropped by up to 11 percentage points. This decline is not a temporary downturn but rather a structural shift in hiring practices. Employers are increasingly seeking candidates who can contribute immediately with minimal training, favoring experienced workers over fresh graduates. Highlights 🧑💼 Entry-level jobs in tech, finance, and marketing have declined by up to 11 percentage points since late 2022. 🏠 Remote work reduces informal mentorship opportunities, pushing companies to favor experienced hires. 🤖 AI automates traditional entry-level tasks, shrinking roles available for junior employees. 🔄 The interplay of remote work and AI raises the bar for newcomers, requiring immediate productivity and advanced skills. 🚫 Fewer entry-level jobs limit young workers’ experience and growth, with negative long-term effects on talent pipelines. 💸 Poaching mid-level talent raises salaries and destabilizes hiring ecosystems, risking future workforce sustainability. 🌟 Companies are adapting with hybrid onboarding, AI-assisted roles, flexible degree requirements, and apprenticeships. Key Insights 🧠 Structural hiring shift fueled by AI and remote work: The trend away from entry-level hiring is not temporary but an enduring change. Organizations now demand new hires capable of adding value immediately, largely due to reduced training capacity in remote settings and AI automating routine functions. This recalibration emphasizes readiness and experience over potential, reshaping the labor market entry dynamics. 🤝 Impact of diminished informal learning: Remote work disrupts the informal knowledge transfer that traditionally occurs through spontaneous, in-person interactions. Junior employees depend heavily on mentorship to acquire tacit knowledge and soft skills; without this, their onboarding becomes inefficient, which motivates employers to minimize hiring juniors altogether. 🤖 AI as a labor multiplier and disruptor: Tools like ChatGPT have effectively taken over many tasks once reserved for entry-level roles, such as email drafting, data handling, and basic programming. This efficiency gain means fewer juniors are needed, but it also shifts job descriptions to include more advanced, AI-complementary competencies. 📉 Career bottleneck and talent pipeline risks: As companies increasingly recruit mid-level or senior talent instead of juniors, early-career professionals face a “catch-22” situation: without experience, they cannot move up, and with fewer entry points, they cannot gain experience. This bottleneck undermines the development of future leadership and innovation capacity within firms. 💰 Economic repercussions of talent poaching: The reliance on experienced hires drives competition and salary inflation at mid-levels, which disadvantages recent graduates and startups unable to compete. The result is a talent ecosystem imbalance: short-term gains for some companies, but increased labor costs, inefficiencies, and instability overall. 🌐 Hybrid and redesigned onboarding as a solution: Successful adaptation involves reimagining entry-level recruitment and onboarding through hybrid models that combine remote work benefits with focused in-person mentoring. Structured onboarding programs, comprehensive documentation, and AI-augmented roles maintain productivity while supporting junior staff development. 🚀 Inclusive talent strategies for future resilience: Dropping rigid degree requirements and expanding apprenticeships open new pathways for early-career individuals, fostering diversity and accessibility. Companies that proactively invest in these approaches can create a sustainable talent pipeline, better equipping themselves to navigate the evolving demands of technology-driven workplaces.
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03:32
The New Career Blueprint
This research examines a significant decline in early-career hiring across advanced economies, investigating whether generative AI or remote work is the primary cause. While AI automates entry-level tasks, remote environments create mentorship friction and higher supervision costs that discourage firms from recruiting inexperienced talent. Research suggests these two forces often overlap, making it difficult for analysts to isolate a single culprit for the shrinking opportunities available to new graduates. To combat this "broken ladder," the research advocates for intentional organizational shifts, such as structured virtual onboarding and AI-augmented training programs. Ultimately, the research argues that proactive management choices and redesigned career pathways are essential to preserving long-term workforce development in a changing technological landscape.
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May 4, 2025
5 min read
ADAPTIVE ORGANIZATION LAB
How to Become an Effective AI-Augmented Leader
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