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Amy Wilson's avatar

I see it a bit similar to 3rd party workers. As much as we wrung our hands over the years as to whether these workers should be owned by HR, ultimately they are still managed by procurement *but* a good HR team understands who they are, what they are doing, how they fit in and are included in some traditional processes.

So I would say that HR first needs to understand the work to be delivered by the business and then how both agents and 3rd parties are (can be/will be) accomplishing this work and what this means for the human workforce (finding ways to grow skills and capability for work not being accomplished by AI/3rd party).

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Meg Bear's avatar

I'm sure you've seen the CES statement from Jensen saying IT will be HR for these agents. I think this is a great conversation because it's going to be quite messy. I think there are several conversations that need to happen with first principles vs. just trying to evolve current roles. These topics include governance, risk, culture, compliance but most importantly this conversation is about work. What work happens where and who is responsible for the results (and missteps). I think we have a lot to learn here before we have a good sense of what the supporting and amplifying roles inside an organization need to be. I do think both the ratios and the nature of the HR role will evolve based on this, but as a second order change. First order has to be getting better clarity on where, how and what agents should and should not be doing.

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