While Artificial Intelligence (AI) offers powerful tools to shape data-driven decisions across human capital, its
success hinges on a crucial element – the human touch. An effective AI integration relies not only on technology and
data, but also the strategic insight, creativity, and enthusiasm of your people.
Building the foundations of a successful AI capability
AI represents a leap forward in technology’s ability to problem-solve with less human intervention. This can set up
an assumption that having the right data and technology available will result in less need for human resources – in
the HR function itself and across organisations as a whole.
While AI uptake can certainly bring major time savings to HR tasks and processes, it requires HR leaders and teams to
lead the human effort AI adaptation demands. This includes a cultural shift from the idea that AI will replace
employees towards having a workforce that can feel enthusiastic about AI as a value-add to their experience at work.
Developing AI literacy is also essential if employees and teams are to maximise the benefits of AI in their own
work, and partner effectively with internal experts and vendors on AI integration.
From organisation-wide transformation to project-by-project implementation, bringing people on the journey is key to
success and innovation. This is why HR have a critical role to play, both in setting an example through their own
adoption and working with executive leaders to establish the guardrails for proper and effective AI governance.
AI is an opportunity for HR to enhance, not replace, HR skills
During the inaugural Aon Human Capital Innovation Symposium, Rachna Sampayo, SVP of Human Resources for Japan & Asia
Pacific at Oracle, discussed how generative AI can enhance existing data and capabilities to accelerate ‘manual’
processes. She has experienced how this approach can create the immediate efficiencies for HR teams to deploy
resources more effectively, improving both quality of delivery and freeing up time to focus on strategic priorities.
“It is making an HR manager’s world more purposeful, more impactful because you don't have to be bogged down with
administrative tasks,” she says.
Rachna described how using resume scans in recruitment means hiring managers and HR teams automate filtering of
candidates and focus on a quality interview experience to improve decision-making. She also highlighted other
opportunities for AI to support better outcomes for the HR function in supporting employee engagement and
performance: