Augmented HR will fundamentally redefine the role of the CHRO and approaches to decision making. To date, HR decisions have depended, in large part, on “experience” and “feeling”, but through the use of generative AI, HR systems have become capable of instantly analyzing massive amounts of data and presenting multiple scenarios. Amid this context, the role of the CHRO is shifting from being the “decider” who makes judgments based on experience to being “the person designing questions” for the AI. The analyses proffered by AI are not “answers,” but “options.” The new decision making of CHROs consists of taking these options and deciding which to adopt in light of their company’s strategy, culture and social context.
As an emblematic example, there is a company that trained an AI on years worth of Board of Directors and corporate strategy council meeting minutes, internal data and the latest external data, then had AIs set to have dozens of different personalities sit in a management meeting. These AIs had mutual discussions with one another in advance, and organized and presented multi-dimensional discussion points and future scenarios based on those discussions. Leadership then took those multiple options and, from there, drilled down to “the path the company should go down.” In this example, AI did not replace decision makers, but, rather, functioned as an “additional line of intellectual support” augmenting leadership’s assumptions and perspectives. Prior to the diverse future visions presented, CHROs design which scenarios to select, which groups of personnel to invest in and which skills to redeploy. In other words, the ability to refine questions and improve the quality of decision making is the core of leadership in the era of augmented HR.
This change in the decision-making approach will significantly change the role of the CHRO itself. CHROs need to evolve in the direction of being “architects of strategy” who create corporate value using data and AI, rather than leaders of human resources management and operations. It will be essential for CHROs taking on this new role to have the ability to use AI to predict the HR portfolio that will be needed in future, simulate the ROI of human capital investment and design and execute measures optimized to the individual level. As a result, CHROs will be able to present data-backed business cases such as, “this re-skilling investment will improve productivity by Y%, which we forecast will deliver Z dollars in revenue,” rather than making qualitative assertions to CEOs and boards of directors.
This change also represents a change in dynamics within leadership. Traditionally, CFOs wielded significant influence through the shared language of “financial data.” By contrast, CHROs would struggle to quantify the human resources and organizational cultures that they dealt in. Augmented HR offers CHROs the tools to “quantify” such intangible assets. In other words, “quantification of human resources and organizations” has the power to give CHROs a new language for dialogue with CFOs and to push human capital to the center of corporate strategy.