AI is reshaping industries, companies, workforces and the way we work. As with previous industrial revolutions, this will mean that companies will need fewer people to perform some tasks, and more people to undertake other (including many new) tasks. Amazon CEO, Andy Jassy, addressed this very topic in a recent message to Amazon’s employees while recent remarks by Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, that AI could wipe out half of all entry-level white-collar jobs — and spike unemployment by 10-20% in the next one to five years have been widely reported. The truth is that it is probably too early to judge how this will play out over time, and whether this industrial revolution will differ from all others in history by being a net destroyer rather than a net creator of jobs. Whatever direction we go in, it’s clearly going to be a disruptive few years ahead. HR needs to play an active role in terms of leading organisational transformation, redesigning work, upskilling the workforce, building a culture of continuous agility, and transforming the HR function itself. HR can be the crucial link ensuring employees can thrive alongside technology.
This month’s collection of resources addresses many of these topics, and if I could highlight one in particular, it would be a new Stanford paper on the Future of Work with AI Agents, which amongst other findings lays out a framework for human-agent collaboration. Enjoy!
Prepare your workforce for the AI era | Strategic HR Insights | Etter
Etter is Draup’s flagship AI transformation engine designed to help enterprises systematically reimagine job roles, skills, and workforce structures in the AI era. Built as an adaptive, modular solution, Etter integrates proprietary labor intelligence, enterprise data, and market signals to provide hyper-contextual, execution-ready recommendations for HR and business leaders.
Etter’s methodology is anchored on three foundational pillars:
The document details advanced models like Tech Stack Mapping, Similar Role Identification, and Location Optimization to help organizations design AI-augmented ecosystems. It also outlines the data needed—from job descriptions to transformation signals—and a 4–6 week pilot approach to assess 10–12 roles for quick wins.
Etter moves beyond theoretical AI strategy to deliver measurable, role-level change—empowering CHROs, CTOs, and transformation teams to redesign workforces that are future-proof, agile, and ethically AI-enabled. Learn more about Etter here.
To sponsor an edition of the Data Driven HR Monthly, and share your brand with more than 140,000 Data Driven HR Monthly subscribers, send an email to dgreen@zandel.org.
The Insight222 People Analytics Trends study is now in its sixth year, and has grown to be the biggest and most important annual study in the field of people analytics. The survey for 2025 is open, and is intended to gain insights into: (1) HR's role in shaping your AI strategy. (2)AI usage & adoption (3) Upskilling and enabling factors, and AI outcomes
If you are the people analytics leader at your company and would like to participate in the People Analytics Trends study for 2025, click this link and please join over 400 companies and complete the survey by the new closing date of July 6.
A trio of highlights from June:
Across all three events I left with a number of reflections including: (1) When people analytics is closely with business strategy it delivers exponential value. (2) AI is elevating and disrupting people analytics in equal measure. (3) Employee listening is the 'human' face of people analytics.
Just to highlight to my Indian network and readers that I'm speaking at TechHR India 2025 in Delhi, which is organised by People Matters, at the end of July. I'll be delivering a keynote on July 31 after a pre-conference workshop on July 30 on The Science of Better Decisions - I hope to see some of you there.
Enjoy reading the collection of resources for June and, if you do, please share some data driven HR love with your colleagues and networks. Thanks to the many of you who liked, shared and/or commented on May’s compendium.
If you enjoy a weekly dose of curated learning (and the Digital HR Leaders podcast), the Insight222 newsletter: Digital HR Leaders newsletter is usually published every other Tuesday – subscribe here – and read the latest edition.
IBM - 5 Mindshifts to Supercharge Business Growth
It’s no longer a question of whether to use AI—but where AI will give you the greatest lift and how you should redeploy your people to accelerate growth.
IBM’s recently published 2025 CEO Outlook is required reading for all chief people officers and heads of people analytics. The study highlights that talent recruiting and retention is ranked #2 in the top challenges of CEOs (see FIG 1). The report highlights five mindshifts to supercharge growth in the age of AI – all of these apply for HR too: (1) Make courage your core (“The power and potential of AI is pushing organizations to transform faster, even if they’re not sure what exactly what that entails.”) (2) Embrace AI-fuelled creative destruction (“Establish metrics and monitoring systems to assess AI effectiveness and create a culture of accountability.”) (3) Cultivate a vibrant data environment (“Start with data. If CEOs get their data environment right, they can accelerate change, impact, and stakeholder value.”) (4) Ignore FOMO, lean into ROI (“Only 25% of AI initiatives have delivered expected ROI—and only 16% have scaled enterprise-wide. Fail fast and move on.”) (5) Borrow the talent you can’t buy:
CEOs are looking to reskill the talent they already have (build), hire the talent they need (buy), add AI assistants and agents to workflows wherever they can (bot), and rely on partners to borrow what they can’t find another way (borrow).
FIG 1: Top CEO Challenges 2025 (Source: IBM Institute for Business Value)
MCKINSEY - Seizing the agentic AI advantage
To realize the potential of agents, companies must reinvent the way work gets done—changing task flows, redefining human roles, and building agent-centric processes from the ground up.
According to McKinsey, there is a ‘GenAI paradox’ with nearly eight in ten companies reporting they are using Gen AI—yet just as many reporting no significant bottom-line impact. To break out of this morass, the authors argue that Agentic AI—autonomous, goal-oriented systems—is the true game-changer, poised to automate complex processes and fundamentally transform workflows. For HR leaders guiding workforce transformation, the core insight of the study is profound: successful integration means redesigning work around AI agents, not merely layering AI onto old processes. This strategic pivot promises enhanced operational agility, accelerated execution, and newfound organisational resilience. However, realising this potential hinges on critical human factors. Driving adoption and earning trust are paramount, alongside robust governance for agent autonomy. This necessitates a shift from fragmented AI initiatives to strategic, cross-functional programs, coupled with significant upskilling across the workforce. While the article doesn't explicitly detail the Chief People Officer's role, the implications are clear: HR must champion the human-AI partnership, ensuring ethical deployment and preparing talent for this profound evolution of work. Kudos to the authors: Alexander Sukharevsky, Dave Kerr, Klemens Hjartar, Lari Hamalainen, Stéphane Bout, and Vito Di Leo, with Guillaume Dagorret.
HR must champion the human-AI partnership, ensuring ethical deployment and preparing talent for this profound evolution of work.
FIG 2: Maximising value from AI agents requires process reinvention (Source: McKinsey)
STANFORD - Future of Work with AI Agents: Auditing Automation and Augmentation Potential across the U.S. Workforce Project | Paper | COBUS GREYLING - The Future of Work with AI Agents — Insights from a Stanford Study | SERENA HUANG - AI Agents Are Ready to Work With Us, but Are We Ready to Work with Them?
[As] AI agents start to enter the workforce, key human competencies may be shifting from information-processing skills to interpersonal and organizational skills.
For anyone looking to understand how the AI agents might shape the future of work, I recommend diving into a new study from Stanford University – warning, you may get lost as the paper is absorbing! The paper presents a framework, the Human Agency Scale (HAS – see FIG 3), which has a five-level scale from H1 (no human involvement) to H5 (human involvement essential) and is designed to help quantify the desired level of human involvement across various tasks. Other findings from the study include: (1) Lack of trust (45%) is the most common fear workers have about AI automation in their work. (2) Workers want automation for low-level and repetitive tasks with 46.1% expressing positive attitudes towards AI automation. (3) Workers generally prefer higher levels of human agency, potentially foreshadowing frictions as AI capabilities advance. Kudos to the authors of the Stanford Study: Yijia Shao, Humishka Zope, Yucheng Jiang, Jiaxin Pei, David Nguyen, Erik Brynjolfsson, Yang Diyi. I also recommend the shorter and more accessible summaries of the key findings from the paper and their potential implications by Cobus Greyling and Serena H. Huang, Ph.D. (see links above) as well as Ross Dawson (see here).
FIG 3: Levels of Human-Agency scale (Source: Stanford University, Shao et al)
PETER CAPPELLI AND RANYA NEHMEH – Hybrid Still Isn’t Working | BRIAN ELLIOTT - When Academics Ignore Research (and Reality)
The contentious debate about the merits – or otherwise – of hybrid work continues as these two articles demonstrate. Firstly, in their article for Harvard Business Review, Peter Cappelli and Ranya Nehmeh present the case that hybrid is harming collaboration, deepening social isolation, weakening culture, and is leading to lower performance. They argue that this is primarily because of the way that many companies manage hybrid and remote workers: “You can’t effectively manage remote and hybrid workers using the same methods you did when employees were still all together in the office.” They then suggest eight strategies including: creating and enforcing rules, revamping performance appraisals, and establishing in-office anchor days. Brian Elliott, who along with the likes of Nick Bloom (see latest WFH Research here) and Annie Dean (listen to my podcast discussion with Annie on using behavioural science for distributed working) is one of my go-to experts on hybrid and distributed work, provides a 'teardown' (his words!) of Hybrid Still Isn’t Working. He examines some of the research cited in the HBR article and compares this to the available data e.g. contrary to everyone going back to five days in the office, Brian highlights Flex Index data (see FIG 4) showing that hybrid dominates at 43% of firms. Brain also highlights that the article ignores research on return to office mandates such as: “no financial benefit, no stock market boost, but declining engagement and retention issues among experienced talent and women at 3X the rate of men.” I’ll let readers make their own minds up but recommend that any companies considering a change in their approach analyse their own data and make considered decisions. As Brian concludes in his article:
Instead of debating days per week, focus on what drives results: clear team goals, intentional collaboration rhythms, and management practices that work anywhere. The magic isn't in the location—it's in how well you lead distributed teams doing complex work.
FIG 4: Structured Hybrid continues to dominate as the preferred work model for US companies (Source: Flex Index)
MICHAEL ARENA AND AARON CHASAN - The social signals behind employee retention
Research has long shown that employees at the center of an organizational network—those with many active connections—are 24 percent less likely to leave.
In their article, Michael Arena and Aaron Chasan highlight an important insight: employee connection, not just engagement, is the true bedrock of retention: “In today’s networked workplace, social withdrawal is often the first—and most reliable—indicator that someone’s already halfway out the door.” For HR to genuinely impact business performance and employee experience, we must leverage social signals to build robust internal networks. The authors outline four high-impact ways HR can proactively employee connection and significantly reduce attrition: (1) Utilise network analysis: Identify early flight risks by spotting employees with few or declining connections. (2) Facilitate connection moments: Deliberately create opportunities for interaction, especially in hybrid settings, using tools like interest-based matching. (3) Support relationship-rich teams: Encourage cross-functional initiatives and invest in psychologically safe team cultures. (4) Routinely pulse central employees: Their engagement profoundly influences the entire network.
In today’s networked workplace, social withdrawal is often the first—and most reliable—indicator that someone’s already halfway out the door.
PIETRO MAZZOLENI AND ERIC BOKELBERG - The right owner, the right impact: mastering people analytics accountability
Clear ownership ensures that sensitive data is handled responsibly, analytics initiatives are aligned with business priorities, and AI solutions deliver trustworthy, actionable insights.
Pietro Mazzoleni and Eric Bokelberg provide guidance on mastering people analytics by defining clear ownership – a cornerstone for unlocking business value from people data. Many organisations falter due to unclear accountability, risking inefficiencies and mistrust. Pietro and Eric outline four essential domains for assigning ownership: (1) Data Governance. (2) Stakeholder Management. (3) Data & AI Platforms. (4) Functional AI. They then recommend ownership across five key functional roles: the People Analytics Team, CHRO and HR Leadership Team, Business Function Leaders, Chief Data Office, and IT/AI Technology Team. By aligning accountability with expertise, HR leaders can ensure data is handled responsibly, initiatives drive strategic priorities, and AI delivers trustworthy, actionable insights, ultimately generating real business impact.
LUDEK STEHLIK AND COLE NAPPER - Beyond Prediction: Exploiting Organizational Events for Causal Inference in People Analytics | KEITH MCNULTY – R for People Analytics | MARIA NOLAZCO MASSON - The People Analytics Staircase | PATRICK COOLEN – People Analytics Spotlight: Oliver Kasper, Giovanna Constant, and Marcela Mury
In each edition of the Data Driven HR Monthly, I feature a collection of articles by current and recent people analytics leaders. These are intended to act as a spur and inspiration to the field. Four are highlighted in this month’s edition: (1) Ludek Stehlik, Ph.D. and Cole Napper examine one of the Holy Grails of people analytics – understanding causality, including exploring why randomised experiments (see FIG 5) are the ‘gold standard’ (but rarely feasible), and how real-world organisational events can be used as natural experiments. (2) Keith McNulty offers a set of open source materials for a 2-day course on explanatory technical methods in People Analytics using R. (3) For anyone early in their people analytics career and looking to accelerate their development, I recommend diving into Maria Nolazco Masson’s excellent series: The People Analytics Staircase, which provides a practical framework to advance in People Analytics, from foundational concepts to deep strategic dives. (4) Finally, in this section, I recommend checking out Patrick Coolen’s excellent People Analytics Spotlight Series, which to date has insights from Oliver Kasper, Giovanna Constant and Marcela Mury.
FIG 5: Randomised controlled trial (Source: Simply Psychology)
MICHELLE CHAN CROUSE, TED MOORE, ANNA PENFOLD, BRAD PUGH, AND ALISON HUNTINGTON - The CHRO of the future: How CHROs and organizations can prepare for what’s next
The CHRO role is no longer just about managing human capital—it's about unleashing the potential of your workforce, whether they’re a human or a bot.
This report by Russell Reynolds Associates dissects the evolving role of the Chief Human Resources Officer (CHRO) and provides a helpful guide on how the CHRO can lead workforce transformation. It is structured into three chapters: (1) How the CHRO role has changed: highlighting the CHRO's transition from operational support to a strategic leader, now deeply embedded in C-suite succession, transformation, and even technology, crucial for organisational stability. (2) Who will be the CHROs of the future? capturing the need for a new CHRO profile, demanding broader strategic, technological, and operational experience beyond traditional HR, coupled with acute emotional intelligence to navigate complex stakeholder landscapes. This chapter also highlights new roles and responsibilities that may emerge in the HR function including a ‘Chief HR Bot’ reporting to the CHRO and responsible for data-driven decision making. (see FIG 6). (3) How CHROs and organisations can prepare for the future: with actionable guidance, emphasising the responsible integration of AI, significant investment in HR data and analytics, and clear communication around workforce transformation, ultimately elevating HR's strategic influence. This analysis by Michelle Chan Crouse, Ted Moore, Anna Penfold, Brad Pugh and Alison Huntington reinforces that the future CHRO is a critical architect of business success, leveraging data and strategic acumen to shape adaptive, resilient organisations.
FIG 6: Potential roles in the HR team of the future (Source: Russell Reynolds)
DAVE ULRICH, DICK BEATTY, AND PATRICK WRIGHT - What Competencies Define an Effective HR Professional? Past, Present, and Future
In their article, Dave Ulrich, Dick Beatty, and Patrick Wright analyse a number of different HR competency models including their own, which has been developed through eight studies since 1987 across 120,000 participants. Their analysis leads them to recommend expected and emerging competencies across six HR skills domains (see FIG 7): (1) Accelerate business, (2) Advance human capability, (3) Make change happen, (4) Use GenAI and analytics for information, (5) Create organisation culture, and (6) Demonstrate personal proficiency. For HR leaders and professionals looking to learn more, I recommend learning about the Global HR Learning Experience programthat Dave, Dick and Patrick have developed.
FIG 7: Expected and emerging competencies for HR professionals (Source: Dave Ulrich et al)
JEN STAVE, RYAN KURT AND JOHN WINSOR – Agentic AI is Already Changing the Workforce
AI agents are fast becoming much more than just sidekicks for human workers. They’re becoming digital teammates—an emerging category of talent.
The advent of Agentic AI is no longer a distant future; it's here, fundamentally reshaping our workforce. In their article, Jen Stave, PhD, Ryan Kurt and John Winsor explain that these autonomous, goal-oriented AI systems aren't just tools; they're becoming digital colleagues, capable of complex tasks and decision-making. For HR and business leaders, this demands a seismic shift in how we approach talent, roles, and organisational design. The article outlines seven critical actions to help your organisation thrive: (1) Map work tasks and outcomes (“Deconstruct each role or project into its component tasks and outcomes.”) (2) Assess AI capability. (3) Integrate your hybrid team (“Develop a hybrid-workforce strategy to define which tasks AI will own, which tasks people will own, and how the escalation of problems should happen.”) (4) Redesign your business and workforce model (“Envisioning new ways to procure and deploy talent, including full-time employees, temporary hires, freelancers and AI.”) (5) Set legal and ethical ground rules. (6) Capture value continuously as it evolves. (7) Remain human-centric (“AI reduces the need for people to conduct mundane tasks and elevates the importance of high-value, human-led tasks.”). For more from John Winsor, I recommend listening to his conversation with me on the Digital HR Leaders podcast: Addressing the Global Skills Shortage with Open Talent Strategies.
MICROSOFT WORK TRENDS INDEX - Breaking down the infinite workday
The future of work won’t be defined by how much drudgery we automate, but by what we choose to fundamentally reimagine.
In this follow-up to their recently published 2025 Work Trend Index Annual Report, this article from Microsoft exposes the modern "infinite workday" – a relentless cycle starting pre-dawn, peppered with incessant emails and messages, hijacked by meetings, and relentlessly spilling into evenings and weekends (see FIG 8). It's a chaotic, fragmented existence that HR leaders, focused on productivity and wellbeing, must address. The critical insight is that AI demands rethinking how work is structured and experienced. This isn't about simple automation; it's about fundamentally redesigning the rhythm of work. The article proposes a clear "path forward" with three vital starting points: (1) Follow the 80/20 rule: Leverage AI to streamline low-value tasks, allowing focus on the 20% that drives 80% of outcomes. (2) Redesign for the Work Chart: Shift from static teams to agile, outcome-driven units, using AI to bridge skill gaps. (3) Become an agent boss: Empower employees to utilize AI agents to supercharge their work and focus on high-quality insights. While the article itself doesn't explicitly detail the opportunity for HR and People Analytics to lean in and shape this future, the implications are clear: these functions are pivotal in orchestrating this transformation, ensuring a focused, productive, and ultimately more human-centric work environment.
FIG 8: The infinite workday bleeds into evenings and weekends (Source: Microsoft Work Trends Index)
MEGAN REITZ AND JOHN HIGGINS - Create Mental Space to Be a Wiser Leader
We live in complex times that demand complex thoughts and conversations — and those, in turn, demand the very time and space that is nowhere to be found.
In their article for MIT Sloan Management Review, Megan Reitz and John Higgins explain the need for leaders and workers to balance ‘doing’ and ‘spacious’ modes (see FIG 9) and present their research that finds in our rush to do more we’re losing the critical space to think deeply. This has a detrimental effect on leadership and organisation effectiveness. In order to help leaders develop the capacity for the spacious mode, the authors present their SPACE Framework (Safety, People, Attention, Conflict, Environment). By consciously creating environments that foster reflection and broader thinking, HR can empower leaders to transcend short-term noise, perceive critical interdependencies, and ultimately drive superior business outcomes and a more human-centric employee experience.
FIG 9: The Attentional Mode Framework (Source: Reitz and Higgins)
ROB CROSS AND MOLLIE LOMBARDI - Leading from Anywhere: Driving Results in the Age of Distributed Work
Improving the performance of bottom-quartile leaders yields a 32% productivity impact.
In their recently released study for The Institute for Corporate Productivity (i4cp), authors Rob Cross and Mollie Lombardi highlight that leading distributed work is a greater challenge than is commonly acknowledged. While 86% of organisations say work has become more distributed, 58% of leaders admit they are only "somewhat" effective in this new environment, which increases burnout and limits productivity. The paper identifies six capabilities of leadership effectiveness of top-performing leaders that help employees thrive in a distributed work environment (see FIG 10). Three other key insights from the report are: (1) Fix the bottom, not just the top: Elevating poor managers to just average can result in a 32% productivity gain—and a 33% boost in engagement. (2) Culture is the new productivity engine: Leaders who curate healthy team cultures see a 34% overall market performance lift. (3) Distribute leadership, not just work: Empowering teams with ownership and shared leadership responsibilities is key to sustainability and innovation. Thanks to Heather Muir and Kevin Oakes for highlighting the study.
FIG 10: Capabilities that most distinguish high-performing leaders (Source: i4CP)
KATHI ENDERES AND STELLA IOANNIDOU - Pacesetters in the Superworker Era: The Six Secrets of High-Performing Organizations
Pacesetters are reimagining HR through systemic approaches that integrate talent management, workforce planning, and organizational development to drive AI-powered transformation
Kathi Enderes and Stella Ioannidou present the findings from a four-year collaborative study between The Josh Bersin Company and Eightfold, which analyses the leadership and HR strategies of ‘Pacesetter’ companies - the top 5% performers in every industry – with regards to AI transformation. The article – and paper – identifies six secrets as being key to AI transformation, which these companies approach as a people – rather than technology – transformation: (1) AI Transformation for Growth, Not Cost Control (“[Pacesetters] use AI to improve forecasting, personalize the employee experience, and significantly boost productivity across the enterprise”). (2) Continuous Innovation at the Core (“Pacesetters embed innovation skills, experimentation platforms, and design thinking capabilities across the entire organization”). (3) Productivity-Based Work Redesign (“Instead of layering new tools on top of old workflows, they strip out bureaucracy, clarify accountability, and focus on high-value, meaningful work”). (4) Talent Density: Skills Quality over Quantity (“[Pacesetters] continuously redesign work: removing friction, unlocking capability, and structuring around value rather than legacy” – see FIG 11). (5) From Change Management to Change Agility (“Pacesetters excel at identifying and nurturing the skills needed to navigate change, ensuring their workforces are equipped to adapt to new technologies and processes”). (6) Systemic HR®, Powered by AI (“Pacesetters are reimagining HR through systemic approaches that integrate talent management, workforce planning, and organizational development to drive AI-powered transformation”).
FIG 11: The Four Stages of Work Redesign (Source: The Josh Bersin Company)
CURTIS L. ODOM, CHARN P. MCALLISTER, AND RYAN SOFFER - Why Belonging Matters More Than Just Diversity
When leaders commit to fostering a culture of belonging, the connection between management practices and diversity-related outcomes becomes clearer
In their article for MIT Sloan Management Review, Curtis Odom, Ed.D., Charn McAllister and Ryan Soffer argue that belonging and psychological safety are the true strategic goals of DEI. For HR leaders focused on impact, this is key. The authors critique the common misstep of viewing diversity as an end in itself, stressing that its value only materialises when people feel genuinely included and safe. Crucially, it outlines three targets for effective DEI. First, establishing belonging and psychological safety as the ultimate aim. Second, urging organisations to move beyond single-approach diversity practices, advocating for a multifaceted, integrated strategy. And third, emphasising the need for persistence to sustain diversity efforts through consistent, long-term action. This isn't just about ticking boxes; it's a strategic imperative for HR to unlock human potential, drive innovation, and deliver tangible business outcomes through a truly inclusive culture.
Much of the innovation in the field continues to be driven by the vendor and analyst community, and I’ve picked out a few resources from June that I recommend readers delve into:
FIG 12: The evolution of the people analytics leaders (Source: Gabe Horwitz)
FIG 13: The People Analytics Leader's Journey (Source: One Model)
FIG 14: Wage stagnation is most pronounced in early-career roles (Source: Revelio Labs)
FIG 15: How to build GenAI confidence (Source: Degreed)
FIG 16: Skills mapping horizon (Source: LACE Partners)
In another month of high-quality podcasts, I’ve selected four gems for your aural pleasure: (you can also check out the latest episodes of the Digital HR Leaders Podcast – see ‘From My Desk’ below):
NICKLE LAMOREAUX AND TEUILA HANSON: How IBM built a skills-based organisation
LinkedIn has recently released an excellent report, CHRO Case Studies: Leading from the Front, which features case studies from five top-notch CHROs, which examine how BCG (Amber Grewal) has fully embraced AI; how IBM (Nickle LaMoreaux) has rethought performance management; how leaders at Allianz (Bettina Dietsche) are modelling the change they want to see; how Wood ( Marla Storm ) is addressing burnout and well-being; and how LinkedIn ( Teuila Hanson ) has introduced Coaching for All. The video featuring Nickle speaking to Teuila, provides a snapshot of the content in the report, and focuses on how IBM has built a skills-based organisation by starting with the data and tracking how skills are changing for each and every job role.
ROSS SPARKMAN - Strategic Workforce Planning: Developing Optimized Talent Strategies for Future Growth
Ross Sparkman is widely recognised as one of the most accomplished expert practitioners in workforce planning, and the first version of Strategic Workforce Planning was an excellent guide to the fundamentals of this critically important business practice. The second edition provides a deep dive into what it takes to embed SWP and provides new guidance on areas such as: SWP in the age of GenAI, skills-based SWP, leading the SWP function and the future of SWP.
FRACTIONAL INSIGHTS – The Adaptive Organization: Building and Evolving Culture Across Growth Stages
The latest white paper from the Fractional Insights team of Shonna Waters, PhD, Laura Lomelí Russert, Ph.D. and Erin Eatough, PhD, provides an immensely helpful, research-backed framework for building and evolving culture intentionally, as your business scales. The paper details a stage-based model to guide culture through four stages of growth: early, growth, mid-size and enterprise as well as tools to align systems, behaviours, and values, practical insights from organisational psychology and systems thinking, and pitfalls to avoid as complexity increases.
June saw four new episodes of the Digital HR Leaders podcast – three sponsored by HiBob (thanks Louis Gordon ), and a special bonus episode sponsored by Gloat (thanks Ruslan Tovbulatov ), as well as a round-up of series 47, and a role-reversal as I guested on the HR Leaders podcast.
There continues to be so much interesting content around on AI and its impact on business, leadership and HR that this month’s bonus resources are all focused on aspects of this topic:
FIG 17: Source - Ethan Mollick
HR is uniquely positioned to make sure the future of work is both productive and humane.
I’d like to highlight once again the wonderful resource created by Richard Rosenow and the One Model team of open roles in people analytics and HR technology, which now numbers over 500 roles with 60% these being new.
Finally, a huge thank you to the following people who either shared the June edition of Data Driven HR Monthly and/or posted about the Digital HR Leaders podcast, conferences or other content. It's much appreciated: Charlotte Copeman Gareth Flynn Gulce Guleli Scott Rogers Piyush Mathur AJ Herrmann James Griffin Hernan Chiosso, CSPO, SPHR ? Rochelle Carland Jesse Clark, MBA Miralem Masic Helder Figueiredo Kevin Le Vaillant Emily Killham Marina Pearce, PhD Lida Chahipeyma Dr. Christoph Spöck Dr. Tobias Bartholomé Sergio Garcia Mora Shujaat Ahmad Ali Nawab Lindsey McDevitt Cristian Gabriel Alvarez Nirit Peled-Muntz William Werhane Amardeep Singh, MBA Tsevelmaa Khorloo Debbie Harrison Aravind Warrier Scott Reida Joy Kolb Emily Klein Graham Tollit Dan George Sai Bon Timmy Cheung 張世邦 Margad B Catriona Lindsay Erin Fleming Fiona Jamison, Ph.D. Lewis Garrad Francesca Caroleo (SHRM-SCP, ICF-ACC) Judi Casey Kouros Behzad Rupert Bader Rosemary Byde Preetha Ghatak Mukharjee Amy Huber-Smith Danielle Farrell, MA, CSM Aline Costa Timo Tischer Meghan R. Lowery, Ph.D., M.S. David Simmonds FCIPD Prabhakar Pandey Adam McKinnon, PhD. Greg Newman Kyle Forrest John Barrand Elson P. Kuriakose Jeffrey Pole David van Lochem Hanadi El Sayyed Matt Elk Al Adamsen Kyle Winterbottom Luka Babic Eric Guidice Monika Manova Ankit Saxena, MBA Kirsty Coral Baynton ??? Irada Sadykhova Dawn Klinghoffer Dr. Denise Turley AI.Impact.Equity Evan Franz, MBA Philip Arkcoll Toby Culshaw Dan Riley Sanja Licina, Ph.D. Daniyal Wali Azima Mavlonazarova Julius Schelstraete ? Angela LE MATHON Joonghak Lee, Serap Zel, PhD, Milou Wesdijk, Ingi Finnsson ?, Joanna Thompson (Kempiak), Heather Muir, Summer Pan, Anna Kuzmenko, Olivier Bougarel, Marino Mugayar-Baldocchi, Tobias W. Goers ツ, Bence Gősi, Roxanne Laczo, PhD, Michelle Deneau, Don Gray, Marc Caslani, Claire Masson, Fabian Stokes, MBA, SWP, Delia Majarín, Barry Swales, Narelle Burke, Stela Lupushor, Anna A. Tavis, PhD, Jeremy Shapiro, Kanwal Rai, Patrick Davis, Placid Jover, Francisco Marin, Matthew Shannon, Rashmita Lenka, Henrik Håkansson, Alexandre Monin, Dale Clareburt, Dana Shoff, Warren Howlett, Agnes Garaba, Greg Pryor, Phil Inskip, Stephanie Murphy, Ph.D., Gaëtan Bonny, Nicola Forbes-Taylor FCIPD, Ian Grant FCIPD, Neil Vyner, Joseph Frank, PhD CCP GWCCM, Mila Pascual-Nodusso, Adam Treitler, Fábio Priori, Johann Cheminelle, Alex Browne, Dolapo (Dolly) Oyenuga, Megan Kraus Langdon, Bill Banham, Tom Reid David Balls (FCIPD) Juan Antonio Vega Frankie Close Asaf Jackoby, John Gunawan, Daisy Grewal, Ph.D. Amit Mohindra Sonia Mooney Oliver Auty Caitie Jacobson Mikulis Pedro Pereira Ben Berry Natasha Fearon Andrew Spence Ravin Jesuthasan, CFA, FRSA
David Green ?? is a globally respected author, speaker, conference chair, and executive consultant on people analytics, data-driven HR and the future of work. As Managing Partner and Executive Director at Insight222, he has overall responsibility for the delivery of the Insight222 People Analytics Program, which supports the advancement of people analytics in over 100 global organisations. Prior to co-founding Insight222, David accumulated over 20 years experience in the human resources and people analytics fields, including as Global Director of People Analytics Solutions at IBM. As such, David has extensive experience in helping organisations increase value, impact and focus from the wise and ethical use of people analytics. David also hosts the Digital HR Leaders Podcast and is an instructor for Insight222's myHRfuture Academy. His book, co-authored with Jonathan Ferrar, Excellence in People Analytics: How to use Workforce Data to Create Business Value was published in the summer of 2021.
I'll be speaking about people analytics, the future of work, and data driven HR at a number of upcoming events in 2025:
More events will be added as they are confirmed.