Human Capital Management in the Age of AI and the New Role of the CHRO Part 2: Transforming the HR Portfolio from “Information Management” to a “Decision-Making Infrastructure”

Insight
Mar 17, 2026
  • Human Capital Management
  • AI
  • Management Strategy/Reformation
  • Talent & Organization Management
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As the utilization of generative AI becomes an important management agenda, organizations are increasingly challenged to integrate AI into the core of management and leverage it to strengthen competitiveness and sustainable growth.
This six-part insight series redefines human capital management and the role of the CHRO in the AI era, presenting a direction for maximizing the value of human capital.
In Part 1, it was shown that generative AI is not a substitute for decision-making, but rather an enabler that structures complex information into issues and options, thereby enhancing the CHRO’s decision-making capability. It introduced the concept of “augmented human resources .”
Reference: Human Capital Management in the Age of AI and the New Role of the CHRO Part 1: Maximizing Intellectual Capital Through “Augmented Human Resources”

In Part 2, we focus on the HR Portfolio, one of the themes that tests the decision-making capability of the CHRO. Although the HR Portfolio is a core concept in the practice of human capital management, many cases show that it is not sufficiently utilized in executive decision-making. This insight examines how generative AI can enable the HR Portfolio to function as a framework that supports executive decision-making.

  • Kazuki Sato

    Director
  • Shunsuke Kosaka

    Shunsuke Kosaka

    Senior Consultant

The Reality That HR Portfolios Do Not Serve as a “Foundation for Decision-Making”

This chapter organizes the definition and intended role of the HR Portfolio and clarifies why it is not sufficiently used for executive decision-making in many Japanese companies. It also focuses on the structural disconnects that arise between business strategy, talent data, environmental changes, and management issues, revealing the factors that cause the HR Portfolio to remain merely a tool for “Visualization for Administrative Monitoring.”

The Intended Role of the HR Portfolio

A HR Portfolio is a framework that supports management investment decisions by visualizing and analyzing the talent required to execute mid-to-long-term strategic objectives from two perspectives: “Quantitative (headcount and capacity) and qualitative (skills, experience, and competencies) perspectives.” (Figure 1). It positions human capital not as a mere “cost” but as “capital,” serving as a blueprint for resource allocation to maximize value creation and returns.

Figure 1. Visualization of an HR portfolio

The Barrier of “Visualization for Administrative Control” That Exists in Practice

However, in many Japanese companies, HR Portfolios are not directly linked to executive decision-making. The causes can be broadly categorized into three major disconnects.

  1. Disconnect Between Business Strategy and Talent Data
    Many companies accumulate data such as employee résumés, performance evaluations, and training histories. However, these are merely attribute data tied to “individuals” and are not reconstructed through the lens of “specific skills required to execute business strategy.”
  2. Disconnect Between Static Data and Dynamic Environments
    Traditional methods involve defining skills over several months and surveying all employees to visualize skills. However, by the time the visualizations are completed, market environments and technology trends may have changed, rendering the data “obsolete and irrelevant.”
  3. Disconnect Between “Facts” and “Issues”
    Even if a fact such as “there are XXX employees with digital skills” is visualized, it is not elevated to the strategic issues executives must judge, such as “Is this number sufficient for next fiscal year’s new business creation?” or “If insufficient, which is optimal: external hiring or internal development?”

In this state, the HR Portfolio remains a management document that organizes the current situation and does not function as a foundation for comparing and evaluating future management options. As a result, resource allocation may deviate from business strategy, delaying talent investments and timely talent deployment in growth areas, increasing the risk of mid- to long-term competitiveness decline and missed opportunities. The use of HR Portfolios is becoming an essential initiative for companies aiming for sustainable growth.

Evolution of Skill Visualization and Allocation Enabled by AI

Generative artificial intelligence plays the role of bridging the “disconnects” described in the previous chapter and enabling the HR Portfolio to function effectively (Figure 2). It is important to note here that artificial intelligence is not an entity that automatically determines the “correct answer” (Optimal talent deployment). The essential value of artificial intelligence lies in its ability to integrate dispersed information and highly structure the “decision materials” that allow humans to focus on deep thinking.

Figure 2. Overview of Utilizing AI to Transform the HR Portfolio from “Information Management” to a “Foundation for Decision-Making”

Synthesizing Skills from Unstructured Data (Structuring Information)

Traditionally, visualizing employee skills required an enormous amount of manual work. In contrast, generative artificial intelligence can analyze “unstructured data,” such as work histories, daily reports, project deliverables, and qualitative comments from evaluators, through natural language processing and automatically generate dynamic skill maps.
For example, even if in the absence of explicit self-reporting “I can program,” artificial intelligence can infer the person’s potential expertise and adaptability to unknown fields (learnability) from past project achievements or the content of technical feedback. This enables the visualization of “hidden talent” that would have been overlooked by conventional uniform skill definitions.

Future Gap Analysis and Issue Structuring (Providing Guiding Lines)

Artificial intelligence can also reference external data such as market trends, competitor movements, and technical papers in addition to internal data to predict “skills that will be required in the future.”
For example, it can simulate what kinds of skill gaps will emerge in several years under scenarios such as “maintaining the current business structure” versus “promoting aggressive digital transformation,” and presenting strategic focal points and simulated scenarios—namely, the guiding lines that management must evaluate. This transforms the HR Portfolio from a tool for “reporting the current state” into one for “examining future scenarios.”

Case Example in Manufacturing: Strategic Discussion Through Skill Inference

We introduce the case of a major manufacturing company supported by our firm. Although the company had cultivated technological capabilities over many years, The depth and breadth of these capabilities and their distribution across departments had become opaque.
Generative artificial intelligence was applied to analyze several years’ worth of talent evaluation comments. It inferred each employee’s skill set and created a company-wide “skill heat map.” As a result, it became clear that a highly specialized technology thought to be sufficiently distributed across the company was, in fact, concentrated only among seasoned professionals nearing retirement, leaving a critical shortage among the younger and mid-career employees who would support the company’s next-generation core business.
Based on this “fact,” the management meeting made urgent investment decisions, including “acquiring external specialized talent” and “launching a fundamental reskilling program.”
It is not necessary to realize a fully developed HR Portfolio from the outset. A realistic approach to adopting artificial intelligence is to assume coarse data and skill definitions, use them as hypotheses, and gradually increase granularity through continuous dialogue.

Reframing Talent Allocation as a Management Decision-Making Option

As described thus far, by utilizing the HR Portfolio and allocation scenarios structured by artificial intelligence, the CHRO can engage in more concrete discussions with the executive team and business leaders. Talent allocation is elevated from tactical backfilling to the strategic optimization of capital allocation based on management strategy.

“Strategic Simulation” Enabled by Visualizing the HR Portfolio

Once an organization is able to visualize its company-wide skill assets, artificial intelligence can provide multifaceted allocation proposals that go beyond simple “aptitude judgments,” considering organizational resilience and growth potential.
For example, in a manufacturing company we supported, artificial intelligence was used to cross-analyze the distribution of skills across the entire organization and the operating status of each business when examining talent allocation for a new growth business. Based on this, artificial intelligence presented two contrasting allocation scenarios that were only possible because of the high resolution of the HR Portfolio. As a result, assuming simultaneous promotion of systematization, reduction of individual dependency, and labor saving through the use of artificial intelligence in existing businesses, the company chose Scenario A, which emphasized immediacy by transferring talent from existing businesses to the new business.

Scenario A: Immediate Deployment of Talent with a High Level of Required Skills for the New Business

This scenario involves identifying and allocating employees in existing mature businesses who already possess more than 80% of the skills directly transferable to the new business, based on the HR Portfolio analysis.
Management issue: While the start-up would be the fastest, making short-term results more achievable, it required a difficult judgment on how much risk to tolerate regarding the maintenance of quality in existing business operations and potential delays in delivery, due to significantly reducing the “talent reserves” on the existing business side.

Scenario B: Combined Development Scenario Utilizing “Adjacent Skills” in the HR Portfolio

In this scenario, employees who do not yet possess the skills directly required for the new business but have “adjacent” skills based on the structure of skill acquisition—and who can be reskilled in a short period—are extracted from across the organization and allocated.
Management issue: While the business ramp-up would be more gradual, it would allow the organization to retain top talent in existing businesses while “raising the baseline” of the company-wide skill portfolio to a next-generation level, strengthening future technical talent. It presented the issue of determining over what time frame to recover investments and transform the organization.

Transforming the HR Portfolio into a Strategic Nexus for Executive Dialogue

When artificial intelligence presents these two plans, data alone does not determine which option should be chosen. The final judgment is made by the executive team, including the CHRO, based on the company’s future vision, time horizon, current financial capacity, organizational culture, and risk tolerance. In this situation, the HR Portfolio functions not as a talent management document but as a common language that enables the executive team to discuss future options.
By providing guiding lines such as “if A is chosen, this will happen; if B is chosen, this will happen,” artificial intelligence allows the executive team to focus on deeply managerial and philosophical questions such as “Should short-term gains be prioritized, or should the desired organizational state five years from now take precedence?” The CEO shapes the company’s future vision and timeline, the CFO evaluates investment recovery and risk tolerance, and business leaders join the discussion based on operational feasibility. The CHRO plays the role of structuring and bridging these discussions from quantitative and qualitative perspectives of talent.
The state in which the executive team can engage in dialogue based on shared material for questions such as “What skills does this business truly require?” and “Which should be prioritized—short-term results or mid- to long-term talent sufficiency?” itself represents the enhancement of decision-making capability enabled by artificial intelligence. Artificial intelligence integrates complex information, structures issues and options, and presents them as scenarios. The executive team then makes decisions based on the company’s values and time horizon. Through this collaborative relationship, the HR Portfolio begins to function as the language of management. This is the essence of “enhanced decision-making capability” enabled by artificial intelligence.

How the HR Portfolio Changes Employee Understanding and Career Awareness

Furthermore, such change affects not only the sophistication of executive and CHRO decision-making but also how each employee perceives decisions. As the HR Portfolio evolves from “visualization for administrative control” to a “foundation for decision-making,” supervisors become able to explain why certain allocations or transfers were made, or why specific development investments were chosen. When employees are informed of transfer reasons in connection with the company’s business strategy and future vision, they can more proactively consider their own careers. This creates a sense of understanding, forming the foundation for engagement. Enabling the HR Portfolio to function as the language of management also reconnects management and the field, and strategy and individuals.

Conclusion

As human capital management becomes increasingly sophisticated, organizations are now being evaluated not by “whether they are managing talent” but by “whether talent is being used to inform management decision-making.” In this environment, the CHRO plays the decision-making role of articulating, from a human capital perspective, what future the company chooses and which businesses it prioritizes. Generative artificial intelligence is a powerful means of supporting this shift. While artificial intelligence draws guiding lines to improve the quality of executive discussions, the CHRO interprets these lines based on talent policies and the company’s culture and engages stakeholders in dialogue. Through this iterative process, the HR Portfolio is positioned at the core of management for the first time.

ABeam Consulting promotes “augmented human resources,” which integrates artificial intelligence with human capital management, redesigning strategic human capital management and providing continuous support from strategic planning and data infrastructure development to cultural transformation toward becoming an artificial intelligence-native organization. Through these efforts, we aim to support the realization of new value across organizations in the artificial intelligence era.
From the next installment onward, we will expand this framework of “augmented human resources” into other areas, such as development and engagement, explaining in further detail how artificial intelligence enhances decision-making across human capital management and contributes to improved organizational engagement and development sophistication.

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