HRTips

Upskilling Mantras: Leveling Up Your Workforce

Upskilling Mantras: Leveling Up Your Workforce

Upskilling workforces in AI and analytics is pivotal for 2025 competitiveness, yet practical challenges abound, with 46% of leaders citing skill gaps per McKinsey. 

This HR Spotlight article compiles insights from business leaders and HR professionals on key hurdles to prepare for. 

Experts highlight mindset shifts, fear of displacement, data quality issues, and ethical concerns like bias. 

They stress fostering curiosity through real-world applications, tailored training, and human oversight to bridge gaps. 

By addressing resistance via empathy, ensuring tool relevance, and promoting continuous learning, leaders can transform challenges into opportunities, boosting productivity and adaptability across industries from healthcare to consulting. 

Read on!

Casey Cunningham
Founder & CEO, XINNIX

One of the biggest practical challenges leaders face when helping their teams level up on AI and analytics is making it feel real and relevant. It’s not just about training—it’s about sparking curiosity.

I encourage leaders to create space for people to share how they’re already using AI—at home, at work, anywhere. Personal use often translates into professional impact.

I also challenge leaders to ask their peers how they’re approaching this. You don’t have to figure it all out alone. Chances are, someone else in your organization is already a few steps ahead. Learn from them.

And finally—ask AI! Use it to create grocery lists, build menus, fix issues—get people playing with it. When they see what it can do in everyday life, they’ll be more open to using it professionally.

The goal is to normalize it. The moment they experience that “wow,” the resistance fades. Now they’re in.

Spark Curiosity for AI Adoption

Challenges in AI and Analytics Upskilling

While AI is changing so many aspects of business, with change comes challenges. There is clearly and expectedly a learning curve in this space. Companies are facing the challenge of a workforce that has had limited to no exposure and/or training in AI.

To work effectively with AI, a combination of technical and soft skills is needed. Technical skills such as knowledge of programming languages like Python, Java, R and C++ are commonly used in AI development.

Individuals with backgrounds in computer science, data science, artificial intelligence, robotics, mathematics and statistics and software engineering may possess skills upon which they may rely to begin to understand large language and algorithm model development, as well as prompt engineering (the ability to optimize prompts for AI tools), as an example. may be acquired through self-study.

It’s important for companies to assess the current workforce to help them understand which employees might be suited to support an AI integration process. One initiative many companies are undertaking is to perform a skills analysis on its workforce to identify those in-house who possess the capability to engage in identifying areas where AI may be appropriate.

Companies should also be prepared to deal with the challenge of identifying the application for AI within their companies. Some questions they should consider include: How far down the road should we go with AI? Are there controls in place to test and trust AI’s output? Do we have policies in place to monitor and provide guardrails for individual usage?

These challenges call upon leaders to not only possess, but to also instill and encourage keen problem-solving skills among their teams, to create ethical awareness around AI biases, privacy concerns and the responsible use of AI.

Fostering an environment of continuous learning, adaptability, curiosity, communication and collaboration needs to be a deliberate focus for leaders to enable their companies to travel the AI journey that is ahead.

Assess Skills for AI Integration

One key challenge for education leaders is preparing their workforce to effectively adopt AI and analytics. This goes beyond technical training as it requires a mindset shift toward data-informed decision making.

Educators are the heart of schools, yet many lack exposure to AI tools and face time constraints, making targeted professional development critical.

Leaders must ensure equitable access to technology to prevent deepening disparities, while addressing ethical concerns like data privacy and bias.

AI should be seen as a support, not a substitute, for human judgment. It all starts with a strategic, empowered Human Resource team ready to lay the foundation for continuous learning.

By prioritizing upskilling and fostering an open culture, schools can begin to leverage AI to improve efficiency, accessibility, and ultimately, student outcomes.

Bridge Tech, Human Judgment Gap

Everyone has varying ability levels. Some people learn new tools quickly, while others require more instruction. Training must adapt to these variations. The most effective learning is experiential, using real-world examples.

Understanding data ideas is one thing, but applying them to transactions and property management is quite another. The aim is to close that margin. In addition to teaching theory, I concentrate on demonstrating how analytics enhance decision-making.

Confidence is fostered by promoting inquiry and allowing others to grow from their errors. The team tries new things when they feel encouraged. We can maintain our competitiveness in a changing market with such a mentality.

Overcome Varying Team Abilities

Prompting is your team’s new secret weapon. Everyone thinks these AI tools are just plug-and-play. Drop in a question, get an answer.

The real power of these AI tools isn’t in their ability to answer a question, but in their diversity in what they can do with that question. AI tools are not a set-in-stone algorithm, they are a dynamic algorithm that can give you custom results if you know how to prompt it.

Leaders need to train their team on the art of prompting. Prompting can be unintuitive, but it will make more sense to your team if you educate them on how these models work under the hood.

Think of prompting as a new kind of literacy, and do not be afraid to experiment; only you know what will work best for your team.

Master Prompting for AI Power

Leaders preparing to upskill teams in AI and analytics must tackle three thorny realities. First, overcoming “grunt work paralysis”—even skilled analysts waste weeks on manual tasks like data cleaning or merging NHS trust mappings.

Tools like SCOTi® AI automate this drudgery, freeing 70% of time for strategic work. Second, bridging the “plain English gap”: Employees shouldn’t need coding skills to ask, “Why did margins drop?” Assistive Intelligence that answers conversational queries (with charts/stats) democratizes data access.

Finally, securing buy-in for “messy data” journeys—teams often stall waiting for “perfect” data. SCOTi’s Schema Sense reverse-engineers chaotic databases and even scrapes missing dimensions, proving ROI while fixing infrastructure.

Compliance remains non-negotiable: Ensure tools like SCOTi operate on-premises/air-gapped for sectors like healthcare or defense.

The real win? Treating AI as a collaborator, not a crutch—it’s why teams using assistive tools see 2x faster insights and 50% higher stakeholder trust.

Automate Drudgery, Free Strategy

Honestly, running a tech forward real estate firm showed me how emotion drives adoption more than logic ever could.

People fear status loss more than technology itself and my veteran agents worried AI would erase their market expertise until we reversed the power dynamic. Now they lead our AI testing program, finding new ways to blend human insight with machine analysis.

I’ve also seen that fear hits hardest when AI touches money directly and through countless training sessions, I noticed how quickly agents embrace AI for basic tasks but panic when it approaches their commission structure. We solved this by guaranteeing base pay during the learning phase which let them experiment without risking income.

In all honesty, I believe successful AI adoption starts with protecting people’s sense of value.

Reverse Power Dynamic Fears

Paul Monk
Chief Strategy Officer, Alpha Development

AI technology is developing at such a pace that it will quickly become universal, with little to differentiate the tools used by competing organizations. Most of the value of AI will be delivered in the quality of data, and how each workforce is upskilled & motivated to engage with these new tools.

We initially categorize a workforce into two broad groups – the FOBOs (Fear Of Missing Outs) and the Resistance. FOBOs are anxious to be given access to AI tools & training, while the Resistance try to justify why AI is not applicable to their role, team, or business area. Both need to be acknowledged & engaged by any plan to upskill on AI and analytics.

Upskilling & reskilling for AI should be delivered just like any other transformational learning program – it requires business leader support, active learning, and the opportunity to practice & embed new skills following any formal training.

Once new skills have been acquired, the focus should shift to monitoring application of AI within upskilled teams – including keeping a close eye on “disengaged augmentation” i.e. when an employee working with AI augmentation disengages from their responsibilities and inappropriately allows the AI to complete the task end-to-end.

Ensuring that employees understand their role in augmentation, and are recognized & rewarded for delivering this, is crucial for delivering real change in AI and analytics skills.

Engage FOBOs, Resistance Groups

I work at a software consulting company that helps enterprises adopt AI. One challenge we keep talking about is that AI was trained on a massive amount of material, and it’s not only the good stuff.

It’s getting better fast, but right now, we have to assume that whatever AI is doing is informed by average work. In other words, check it as you would if an aggressively average employee produced it.

Verify AI Outputs Vigilantly

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.

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Conquering the Candidate Gap: Expert Tips for Hiring Success

Conquering the Candidate Gap: Expert Tips for Hiring Success

With 71% of businesses struggling to find qualified candidates amid 2025’s talent crunch, innovative hiring strategies are essential. 

This HR Spotlight article compiles insights from business leaders and HR professionals on beating the odds. 

Experts emphasize building strong workplace cultures, upskilling existing teams, and leveraging global talent pools to attract and retain top performers. 

They highlight outcome-based role definitions, stay interviews for retention, and automation to streamline recruitment, freeing HR for human connections. 

By prioritizing candidate experience, psychological safety, and strategic investments in people, organizations turn hiring challenges into competitive advantages, fostering engaged, skilled teams ready for future demands.

Read on!

Nick Heimlich
Founder & Attorney, NickHeimlichLaw

Businesses must ensure that in order to fight this challenge, they take care of building a powerful workplace culture that can help them pull the right talent into the organization.

Employees should also feel appreciated, hence, they must have a sense of accomplishment through opportunities for professional development and career mobility.

Also better hiring can be connected with a simplified hiring system and collaboration with specialized recruiters who are aware of the specific demands of the company.

Such things as networking and attending local events can also help attract those candidates who share the values of your company.

Once a company creates a reputation that it is a good place to work in, companies are able to stand a better chance of attracting highly skilled people.

In summary, it is about establishing an organizational culture in which employees get a sense of purpose and are encouraged to develop.

Culture Attracts, Retains Top Talent

Nathan Baws
CEO & Founder, Nathan Baws

I share how to optimise both business performance and mood through dopamine optimisation, one of the most powerful levers being the foods we choose to fuel our bodies and minds for peak outcomes.

Finding qualified candidates is a challenge for many businesses, but at Nathan Baws, we’ve taken a proactive approach. We focus on skills and attitude over traditional credentials, which allows us to tap into a wider talent pool.

At the same time, we invest in our current team through upskilling and training, helping employees grow while filling critical roles.

We also use smart recruitment tools and practical assessments to identify the right candidates efficiently.

By combining these strategies, we not only attract talented professionals but also retain them, turning a common hiring challenge into a competitive advantage for our organization.

Upskilling Unlocks Internal Potential

Dr. Cyndi Laurin
Strategic Growth Advisor & Founder, Guide to Greatness

I’ve found the key to finding truly qualified candidates isn’t in listing endless tasks or competencies, but in defining 1-3 powerful, outcome-based deliverables for each functional role.

A deliverable such as, “All projects are completed on time and within budget” for a project manager sets clear, measurable expectations for what’s truly required—in essence, why we are investing in this role in the first place.

With deliverables, you don’t need to watch over someone’s shoulder to assess their capabilities; you can manage the results.
Plus, this level of role clarity attracts candidates who are motivated and able to achieve real impact and inspires innovative thinking on behalf of the candidate.

Hiring for deliverables ensures you’re building a team focused on outcomes and business growth, not just box-checkers.

Outcome Roles Draw High Performers

Ben Schwencke
Chief Psychologist, Test Partnership

Whenever organizations say they are struggling to find qualified candidates, what they really mean is they are struggling to identify qualified candidates.

If you receive 1,000 applications for the role, you will almost certainly have hundreds of qualified candidates in your applicant pool, but organizations just can’t find diamonds in the rough.

This is because organizations design selection processes in strange and idiosyncratic ways, which almost never effectively identify top talent.

For example, most organizations rely on resume sifting for shortlisting, which has been shown to be both highly ineffective and deeply biased against minority candidates.

They use unstructured interviews, which show substantially lower levels of predictive validity compared to structured interviews.

They refuse to use more scientifically robust screening methods, like psychometric assessments and cognitive ability tests, despite a century of evidence supporting their use.

Ultimately, what you want are people who are smart and hardworking. But instead, they ask for candidates from prestigious universities, with 10+ years of overly specific work experience, with the right family name.

The world is full of the former, but you will inevitably struggle if you only hire the latter.

That isn’t a problem with the employment market, it’s a problem with your recruitment processes and the organization’s priorities.

Scientific Selection Methods Find Hidden Qualified Candidates

Gearl Loden
Leadership Consultant & Speaker, Loden Leadership + Consulting

Retention Over Recruitment: The Strategic Advantage of Stay Interviews
Talent shortages won’t be solved by hiring alone. HR leaders who prioritize retention now are building tomorrow’s workforce.

Talent shortages dominate today’s headlines: 71% of businesses report struggling to find qualified candidates. The natural response is to recruit harder, expand searches, raise compensation, or add sign-on incentives. Yet recruitment alone cannot solve what is fundamentally a retention issue. Organizations that excel create environments where people want to stay.

Jeff Weiner, former CEO of LinkedIn, summarized it perfectly: “Start the retention process when the person is still open to staying and not after they’ve already told you they’re leaving.”

One of the most effective tools for achieving this is the stay interview. Unlike exit interviews, which arrive too late, stay interviews uncover what keeps employees engaged and what might tempt them to leave. They allow HR and leadership teams to address issues before it is too late.

The Strategic Benefits of Stay Interviews

Proactive Retention – Concerns surface early, giving leaders time to act.

Engagement and Trust – Employees feel valued and supported.

Cultural Clarity – Insights highlight systemic strengths and weaknesses.

Financial Impact – Retention avoids the high cost of replacing top talent.

Putting Stay Interviews into Practice
Effective stay interviews are structured, consistent, and action-oriented.

Conduct them twice a year with direct reports. Ask questions such as:

What parts of your role keep you engaged?

What might prompt you to consider leaving?

What support or growth opportunities would increase your commitment here?

Equally important is follow-through. When employees see leaders respond, and visible change, trust deepens and turnover decreases.

The future of talent strategy will be defined less by who organizations can recruit and more by who they can retain, grow, and promote from within. Demographic shifts, evolving employee expectations, and the rising cost of turnover make retention an imperative, not an option.

Organizations that embed stay interviews into HR and leadership practices today will stabilize their workforce and build the talent pipelines required for tomorrow’s success.

In today’s environment, where talent is the ultimate differentiator, proactive retention is the strategy that helps organizations to thrive.

Stay Interviews Beat Exit Interviews for Retention

We’ve been able to beat the odds by expanding our talent search beyond local borders and tapping into global talent pools. Instead of competing for the same limited pool of candidates, we focus on hiring overseas professionals who bring both the skills and the dedication businesses are looking for.

Another factor has been investing in the candidate experience—clear communication, quick feedback loops, and making sure people feel valued throughout the process. That alone helps us attract stronger talent and reduce drop-offs.

The biggest lesson: finding qualified candidates isn’t just about looking harder, it’s about looking smarter and wider—leveraging technology, global hiring channels, and building a reputation as an employer people want to work with.

Global Talent Pools Solve Local Hiring Challenges

We’ve addressed the talent shortage by strategically automating our recruitment and onboarding processes. For example, our team integrated our Applicant Tracking System with candidate assessment tools, which has significantly improved our ability to identify qualified candidates quickly.

This automation allows our recruiters to spend less time sorting through applications and more time building meaningful connections with promising candidates.

We let tech handle the initial screening while our people focus on what matters most – evaluating cultural fit and long-term potential.

We’ve also automated onboarding with simple data connectors to share new hire data with payroll. Automation frees HR professionals to focus on the human side of human resources—and that boosts recruiting qualified candidates.

Automation Frees HR to Focus on People

Rob Dillan
Founder, EVhype

Recruiting people is a problem, but I have found that when you bring people into a passion space like EV, sometimes passion is even more wonderful than a perfect resume. At EVhype, we’ve hired people who were just super curious about EVs and willing to learn quickly. A big part of those technical abilities can be taught, but that willingness to join a growing industry – you can’t teach that.

We’ve also doubled down on creating a place where people feel they’re actually part of something larger. It’s easier to attract and keep someone when they feel like they’re helping shape the future of EV adoption. That clear sense of purpose matters a lot.

The other thing has been flexibility. We don’t have a lot of tight job definitions, so we have people wear a lot of hats. It allows us to grow together, and people learn along the way. It’s actually one of our biggest hiring advantages, to be honest.

Passion for EVs Outweighs Perfect Resumes

The modern job market is fueled by gigs and short-term opportunities, not exactly a landscape that promotes loyalty. To counter this, we capitalize on our brand, promoting our internal succession plan and show—not just say—that hard work pays off.

This encourages current workers to invite their social circle to apply and makes it clear to all stakeholders that we are diverse not only in rhetoric but in everything that we do. In other words, people do not need to check who they are at the door.

Internal Promotion Drives External Recruitment Success

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.

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Industry Tips to Ace Interviews: Leaders Reveal Insider Information

Industry Tips to Ace Interviews: Leaders Reveal Insider Information

With 71% of businesses struggling to find qualified candidates, the demand exists alright, but nailing interviews is just as crucial. 

This HR Spotlight article compiles tips from business leaders and HR professionals on three standout elements to impress in interviews. 

Experts emphasize preparation through company research, authentic attitude over polish, and specific examples to showcase impact. 

They highlight soft skills like dependability, outcome-focused answers, and closing strong by asking for the job. 

From trades to tech, these strategies—grounded in clarity, enthusiasm, and relevance—help candidates stand out, proving fit beyond resumes. 

Mastering these can turn interviews into offers, bridging the talent gap in competitive markets. 

Read on!

Here’s what I look for when someone walks into an interview at Lightspeed Electrical — or anywhere in the trades, really.

Show me you’re switched on. That doesn’t mean perfect answers — it means you’ve done your homework. You know what we do, you’ve read our site, and you can talk shop.

Don’t dress like you just rolled out of bed. I don’t expect a suit, but if you can’t respect the room enough to look sharp and clean, how can I trust you in front of a client?

Attitude over everything. Skills can be taught. Work ethic can’t. If you’re hungry, humble, and ready to learn, that gets my attention — every time.

Prep, Polish, Passionate Attitude

The three most important qualities that impress me in an interview are genuine enthusiasm, effective communication, and a problem-solving attitude.

I appreciate candidates who exhibit genuine interest in our business and express their motivation through concrete examples instead of general statements.

Being well-dressed and presenting yourself professionally in appearance matters, but no less important is your attitude; a positive, eager-to-learn attitude leaves a strong impression.

Also, I seek proof of critical thinking—how they tackle challenges or respond to surprise questions—since flexibility is crucial in our rapidly changing field.

For example, I once interviewed a candidate who didn’t merely respond to questions, but presented solutions to theoretical problems, demonstrating initiative and pragmatism.

When preparing, emphasize genuine enthusiasm, clearly articulate your thoughts, and be prepared to explain how you’ve addressed real-world problems; these factors distinguish you.

Enthusiasm, Clarity, Problem-Solving

I have been interviewing for a long time, 30+ years actually and there are many tips I would give for candidate including:

Know the job description front and back. Many times, people don’t study the job description that well and I think that is wrong. I believe you need to know the job description inside and out, because most often they are written by HR and not the hiring manager, so there could be disconnects on the real work needed.

When you do that, you are well armed with the knowledge of what the JD says and you can formulate a lot from what they are expecting of you in the role. Study it as much as you study the company itself!

Do your research on the company. Go to LinkedIn to their company page, Google them, find out big events and talk to those big events. Don’t go overboard, but staying on top of what is happening helps you understand the company better.

Have questions for the end about the role and the company. Focus on what you don’t like and do like about the role, then ask questions and ask questions about the company itself. When you do that, they will understand you care enough to do your research.

Study JD, Research Company, Ask Questions

Provide a specific example for each question – even when not asked for one: Examples are the proof and evidence you have done your job well over the years. So if the question is “describe how you build relationships with external stakeholders”, provide insight into your general approach, then anchor your response with a STAR-framed example that showcases a time where you developed a strong relationship with an external stakeholder (note:- STAR = Situation, Task, Action and Result).

Research the company: Do your homework – look at the company website, see how they are represented in the news and talk to others who work there (or used to work there). When we ask “why do you want to work there”, be ready!

Ask insightful, strategic questions at the end: Questions like “what will be a key challenge for the successful candidate”, “how does the company demonstrate a commitment to work-life integration” or “what 3 words would people who report to you use to describe your leadership style?” are questions that can help you assess the opportunity for fit and show you are keen on the role.

Examples, Research, Insightful Questions

Landing a healthcare role hinges on more than just qualifications. First off,projecting a positive attitude and high energy can be surprisingly impactful, often overshadowing minor shortcomings.

Secondly, prepare 3-5 compelling anecdotes from any stage of your life that highlight your drive, adaptability, and interpersonal abilities. These stories offer genuine insights into your character.

Finally, rehearsing your answers is key. Practice giving responses to standard interview questions, such as “tell me about yourself” and “describe a time you excelled in service.” Thorough preparation builds confidence and ensures you shine when it counts, ultimately increasing your chances of success in the competitive healthcare field.

Energy, Stories, Rehearsed Answers

Sari Honkala
Co-founder & Head of Performance Marketing, Glow Digital

When discussing your skills in an interview, make sure to connect them to real business outcomes. This helps demonstrate the impact of what you do. Many candidates struggle to sell themselves effectively because they don’t know how to highlight the value of their skills.

Be clear and concise in your answers. Practice common interview questions ahead of time. One question you can almost always expect is about your work history and your day-to-day responsibilities. It’s surprising how many candidates struggle to answer this clearly. Think of it as your elevator pitch. You should be able to describe what you do in 30 seconds with confidence and clarity.

Be honest. While your resume is in many ways a sales document, exaggeration can backfire. Nowadays, it’s common for candidates to use AI assistants when writing CVs and I don’t see that as a problem in itself. The problem is that sometimes these can contain outlandish claims about the candidate’s experience.

For example, if your resume says you “spearheaded the development of a new advertising campaign,” but your job title was ‘Intern’ and you worked in that role for two months, that’s definitely going to raise some eyebrows. If you can’t back up those claims during the interview, your chances of landing the role are likely slim.

Impact, Concise, Honest Claims

When I’m interviewing someone to join our team at Lotuswood Organic Wellness Farm, I’m not looking for polished perfection — I’m looking for presence, purpose, and personality.
Show up grounded. We’re a farm. It’s nature-based. I want to see calm energy, not performative polish. How you walk in, breathe, and connect tells me a lot.

Know what lights you up. If you’re applying here just because it’s a job, I can tell. But if you talk about how working in fresh air or supporting meaningful celebrations excites you — now we’re talking.

Be real. I respect authenticity over slick answers. If you don’t know something, just say so. I value honesty and willingness to grow over experience alone.

Grounded, Purposeful, Authentic Presence

Understand the company’s projects, clients, and focus, then reference those in your interview answers. Not only does this demonstrate that you’ve done your homework, but it also helps you to highlight why you’d be an ideal fit for this specific role and company. Before the interview, research the company and identify some major projects, areas of specialization, technologies used, reputation in the market, or aspects of their culture that you can refer to in your answers. When candidates do this, they always stand out in the right way.

Demonstrate the right soft skills. Dependability, work ethic, and teamwork are top of this list for the industries I work in. Stand-out candidates show these traits in multiple ways—through the career highlights in their resume, in how they answer interview questions, and by modeling these traits during the interview process, for instance by arriving for their interview on time and responding promptly to communications.

 Bring documents that verify your skill sets. It’s a smart move to bring copies of your resume, first of all. For those in design roles, it’s also valuable to bring your portfolio of past projects. In other roles, documents can take the form of certifications, trade licenses or qualifications, or safety records. Having these documents on-hand reinforces your suitability for the role and demonstrates a level of preparedness and professionalism that interviewers want to see.

Company Fit, Soft Skills, Documents

My biggest tip I’d love to share with any candidate is to close the interview or essentially ask for the job.

Before I started my entrepreneurial journey, I worked as a sales manager for 7 years in a call center at a Fortune 50 tech company. I was also in charge of headcount for our division and have conducted hundreds of interviews.

The biggest mistake interviewers can make is not asking for the position. Especially in a sales environment, we want the interviewer to close the “proverbial sale” and ask for the job at the end of the interview. This is a mistake that many make when it comes to solidifying themselves as a front-runner for a position.

Interviewees should ask this question at the end of the interview. “Based on your experience, what are some of the characteristics that successful individuals demonstrate in this position?”

The interviewer should then spout off a few of the characteristics they are looking for in their ideal candidate.

Then the interviewee should close the interview by responding: “Having talked about my strengths earlier in the interview and what you just described as needing to be successful in this role, is there a reason why you would not recommend me for this position?”

Close Interview, Ask for Job

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.

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Adapting to the Future: Policies and Challenges in a Multigenerational Workforce

Adapting to the Future: Policies and Challenges in a Multigenerational Workforce

With 46% of Gen Z prioritizing flexible schedules per EY’s 2025 report, organizations are adapting to retain this talent amid multigenerational workforces. 

This HR Spotlight article compiles insights from business leaders and HR professionals on their strategies. 

Experts describe hybrid models with core collaboration hours, asynchronous tools like Asana and Slack, and role-specific flexibility to balance autonomy with accountability. 

They highlight challenges like generational perceptions and communication gaps, addressed through clear deliverables, regular check-ins, and inclusive policies. 

By fostering trust and focusing on outcomes over hours, these approaches enhance productivity, retention, and innovation, ensuring Gen Z’s needs align with business goals and other generations’ preferences for structure.

Read on!

At Pro Electrical, we understand the growing demand for flexibility, especially among Gen Z. I have seen how important work-life balance is for younger generations, and it’s something we embrace.

We’ve implemented flexible schedules where possible, offering our team the option to adjust work hours based on personal needs while ensuring critical tasks are completed on time. However, balancing this with our business goals is a fine line to walk.

We make sure to maintain open communication across all generations on the team, setting clear expectations and being transparent about deadlines and responsibilities. It’s a challenge, but I believe it strengthens the team dynamic.

As an owner, I see flexibility as a way to retain talent, especially when combined with our focus on integrity, reliability, and keeping quality service a top priority. It’s all about striking that balance.

Flexible Hours Boost Team Retention

We’ve fully embraced flexible schedules especially to support our Gen Z team members as a way to build on our commitment to retention and upskilling. We operate asynchronously across time zones, which means deliverables matter more than hours worked.

Gen Z thrives with this autonomy and we’ve seen how they bring fresh energy when trusted with flexibility. We then use tools like Asana and Slack to keep everyone aligned without micromanaging.

It’s difficult though and takes a lot of effort to balance flexibility with structure, so we still set clear guidelines, set core collaboration hours and make sure everything is documented so that young or old, no one gets left behind.

Our goal is to have mutual respect across generations, so Gen Z gets freedom while the business still gets accountability.

Async Tools Enable Gen Z Autonomy

Mike Chappell
Co-Founder & CEO, FormsPal

As we are a fully remote team with team members working from all over the world, flexibility is not just something we implemented out of the growing trend, but even more so out of necessity. Therefore, our company has always been attracting Gen Z workers, and along the way, they have been also teaching us how to adjust and improve further.

Right now, we’re leaning into flexible work schedules and focus more on outcomes rather than fixed hours. We use cloud-based project management tools that are suitable for asynchronous work, so people can contribute when they’re most productive and when their timezone is best for working hours.

It’s also important to ensure everyone is comfortable working like this and everyone respects different time schedules. So we make sure to communicate our work plans every day and adjust if there is a collaborative task, or there’s a strong dependency from one task on another.

It’s honestly complicated only in the beginning, but when your team members feel the ownership over how they manage their work time, it boosts morale and productivity, and the adjustments once in a while don’t create any pressure.

Remote Work Drives Global Productivity

Corina Tham
Finance & Sales Director, CheapForexVPS

As a Business Development Director specializing in forex and trading technology, we’ve embraced the shift toward flexible schedules to cater to the needs of Gen Z while maintaining organizational efficiency. 

Recognizing the importance of this generation’s desire for adaptability, we implemented hybrid work models that allow team members to alternate between remote and in-office work. 

Using tools like Slack and Zoom ensures seamless communication and collaboration across different locations. For the trading industry, where timing is everything, we’ve also introduced staggered work hours to align productivity with peak market schedules. 

Balancing Gen Z’s needs with other generations has meant fostering a culture of inclusivity by collecting regular feedback and hosting cross-generational training programs to encourage mutual understanding. 

Integrating data analytics has allowed us to track workflow effectiveness and strategically adjust our policies for continued growth. 

Ultimately, I believe that listening to employees and leveraging technology not only helps meet evolving demands but also gives us a significant edge in the fast-paced world of trading.

Hybrid Model Balances Trading Demands

We try to be as flexible as possible. We already have a hybrid workplace, so that alone helps our employees be more flexible when they need it.

Also, though we do follow regular business hours, it’s okay if an employee needs to temporarily make some adjustments there to accommodate things they have going on.

I find that being flexible like this really helps our Gen Z workers feel like they have a place on our team and that their needs are being met.

Hybrid Flexibility Attracts Young Talent

I remember when the concept of a “9-to-5” felt like the only path, but today, flexibility is the currency of a thriving workforce.

We use tools like Asana and Slack to keep projects on track, while ensuring regular check-ins foster connection across generations.

Balancing Gen Z’s flexibility preferences with business needs has been an ongoing dialogue. We’ve had to rethink performance metrics, emphasizing accountability and impact over visibility.

One challenge is maintaining team cohesion when schedules vary widely, so we’ve introduced optional co-working sessions and virtual social hours.

Ultimately, our goal is to build a culture where flexibility fuels creativity, collaboration, and growth across all age groups.

Async Tools Foster Cross-Generational Flexibility

I have managed multi-generational teams for over eight years and implemented flexible working practices that have increased employee retention by 78% without reducing productivity levels.

Our organization catered to Gen Z’s work schedule requirements by embracing “core collaboration hours” between 10 AM and 2 PM so that members could organize other work hours around personal requirements.

We embraced asynchronous project management tools and results-oriented performance metrics instead of time tracking. The biggest challenge was ensuring smooth communication amidst different work routines.

We addressed this by establishing clear response time expectations and tweaking meeting schedules to operate across different time zones and requirements. This shift reduced turnover among younger employees by 52% while actually shortening project delivery times for all.

Core Hours Reduce Turnover 52%

Flexibility with Structure Builds Trust Across Generations
At our firm, we’ve responded to the rising demand for flexible schedules, especially from Gen Z, by introducing core hours, remote options, and results-focused benchmarks rather than rigid 9-to-5 expectations.

Flexibility doesn’t mean chaos, it means clarity with autonomy. We emphasize trust and transparency, using collaborative tools like Slack and cloud-based document systems to keep everyone aligned regardless of where or when they work. This approach has helped us attract younger legal talent while still meeting the expectations of more traditional team members who prefer structure.

Balancing Generational Needs Through Communication
The key challenge is creating a unified culture across different work styles. We’ve found that frequent one-on-ones, clear deliverables, and shared calendars help bridge generational gaps and prevent resentment or miscommunication.

Our strategy is to focus on outcomes, not optics. By defining what success looks like for each role, and staying flexible on how it’s achieved, we’ve been able to meet the evolving expectations of younger workers without compromising professionalism or client service.

Clear Deliverables Bridge Generation Gaps

At Gator Rated, I’ve seen firsthand how Gen Z’s preference for flexible schedules is reshaping the workplace dynamic across our real estate team and contractors.

To meet this demand, we moved most of our operations to cloud-based platforms and adopted an asynchronous communication policy—allowing team members to log tasks, updates, and feedback on their own schedule.

We use tools like Slack and Notion to encourage collaboration without enforcing strict office hours, which works well for Gen Z agents balancing client calls and personal time. At the same time, our veteran staff prefers some structure, so we ‘anchor’ a few weekly live check-ins to bring everyone together.

The biggest challenge has been making sure that flexibility doesn’t lead to communication gaps, so we’re extra proactive about regular, transparent updates.

Async Tools Bridge Flexibility Gaps

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.

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Leveling Up on AI: HR Leaders Reveal Key Challenges and Solutions

Leveling Up on AI: HR Leaders Reveal Key Challenges and Solutions

As AI and analytics transform industries, upskilling workforces presents practical challenges, with 46% of leaders citing skill gaps as a barrier, per McKinsey’s 2025 report. 

This HR Spotlight article compiles insights from business leaders and HR professionals on preparing for these hurdles. 

Experts highlight resistance to change, fear of job displacement, and integrating AI into workflows as key issues. 

They stress tailored training, fostering psychological safety, and aligning tools with business goals to bridge gaps. 

By addressing data access, ethical concerns, and cultural shifts, leaders can empower employees, ensuring sustainable AI adoption and enhanced productivity in a rapidly evolving tech landscape.

Read on!

A key challenge for leaders supporting their workforce in AI and analytics upskilling is ensuring access to quality, relevant data and the right tools. Without clean, well-organised data, learning and experimentation become frustrating and ineffective.

Leaders need to invest in data infrastructure and create environments where employees can safely test and iterate. Another practical hurdle is overcoming resistance to change. AI can feel intimidating, especially for those unfamiliar with the technology.

Leaders should focus on building confidence through clear examples of AI’s benefits, practical use cases, and ongoing mentoring. It’s also essential to foster collaboration between technical and non-technical teams to break down silos and encourage knowledge sharing.

Data Access Blocks AI Upskilling

Eugene Stepnov
Chief Marketing Officer, 1Browser

When helping their teams grow their skills in advanced tools and data analysis, managers should focus on crafting a clear strategy that connects these improvements directly to business objectives.

Offering access to suitable learning programs is essential, but ensuring the material is aligned with employees’ unique tasks and duties makes the experience more productive and engaging.

It’s crucial to build a culture of curiosity and innovation, where team members feel supported in exploring new tools and methods without the fear of making mistakes.

Leaders should also emphasize practical uses of advanced tools and data insights to show how these skills can benefit both the company and individual career development.

Regularly appreciating and rewarding achievements inspires teams to keep progressing. Encouraging collaboration is equally important—breaking down barriers between departments and promoting shared learning can boost the effectiveness of skill-building initiatives.

Being an accessible and encouraging leader throughout this journey creates the foundation for a successful transition.

Misaligned Training Stifles AI Progress

Riken Shah
Founder & CEO, OSP

Upskilling a healthcare workforce in AI and analytics isn’t just about training—it’s about reshaping mindset, culture, and workflows. One challenge I’ve seen is the disconnect between technical capability and clinical context.

Many healthcare professionals don’t see how AI directly improves outcomes until they’re shown practical, patient-centered applications. At Ochsner Health, for example, embedding data science into care delivery worked best when frontline staff were involved early and training was tied to real clinical problems.

Another issue is psychological safety—people need room to experiment without fear of failure. At Mayo Clinic, success came when AI literacy was embedded into roles across departments, creating a shared language and sense of ownership.

Based on my experience, effective strategies include role-specific learning paths, storytelling to demystify algorithms, and fostering peer champions. Long-term success depends on treating AI not as a project, but as a mindset shift that evolves with your organization.

Mindset Shifts Challenge AI Training

Des Anderson
Co-Founder & CTO, LearnUpon

AI is set to make learning more adaptive, contextual, and proactive. In terms of upskilling, AI has the power to transform customer education from AI-driven personalization and tailoring learning paths and ensuring customers get the right information at the right moment to predictive analytics and providing support to individuals before users even ask for help.

As AI has made significant progress, it will grow and rapidly change the customer experience in the L&D industry. It’s essential for leaders to prioritize human oversight where possible.

The technology can create skill gaps within companies, making it challenging to fully leverage its capabilities and achieve its intended business results. Like any new tool, users need to know how to use AI to get the most out of it.

It’s critical when developing fully customized learning experiences for individuals and making sure the information produced by AI is accurate and appropriate.

By investing in a robust corporate learning strategy, businesses can effectively train employees on key skills and competencies to succeed in their workplace. Otherwise, they are wasting their time and resources.

Skill Gaps Limit AI Customization

Rebecca Trotsky
Chief People Officer, HR Acuity

As HR leaders, one of our biggest priorities is helping our people leaders reskill and upskill their team members. Many are excited by AI’s potential; yet, some challenges and concerns remain.

Fear of job displacement, lack of understanding, concerns about privacy and bias. Knowing these sensitivities, organizations that are adopting AI have to remember that trust and transparency are just as critical as training.

That means involving your employees from the start, allowing them to help shape how AI is used. Making sure that they understand how AI is an enhancement not a replacement.

And setting clear policies on how tools are used and what data is collected.

Fear, Bias Slow AI Adoption

Expect almost every aspect of your workforce and teams to soon be using AI to enhance their conversations, and even their decision-making as the younger generations are starting to use AI as real companions and assistants.

And that’s why you need to hold all communications to a higher standard, and put in place additional teams to review all outbound communications.

While AI is a great tool it can make mistakes just like human beings, requiring us to be extra vigilant and approve all outbound information.

AI Errors Demand Review Teams

The Hardest Part of AI Upskilling? It’s not the tech. You can teach someone to use AI tools in a week—but reshaping how they think with data? That takes cultural rewiring.

Mindset shift is one of the biggest challenges that most leaders often overlook in AI and analytics. Training teams to use AI dashboards or prompts is not what it is all about. It’s more about helping them move from intuition-based decisions to data-backed judgment. That’s a leap, not a step.

There will be resistance from high performers who have built their careers on instinct. Build in time for reflection, experimentation, & safe failure.

Also, beware of the “tool trap.” Rolling out shiny AI tools without clarifying their need leads to surface-level adoption and wasted investment. Upskilling isn’t a tech project—it’s a change management challenge in disguise.

Cultural Rewiring Delays AI Upskilling

It’s important for HR leadership to stay engaged with the C-suite, board, and shareholder/stakeholder viewpoints. The truth of the situation is this: employees may be training tools that ultimately displace roles, including their own.

The C-suite and board are already weighing this tradeoff between upskilling and strategic workforce reduction. HR must be prepared to navigate sensitive implications around reskilling, job design, and ROI justification.

Budget decisions hinge on whether the AI investment drives measurable operational advantage without eroding morale or stakeholder trust.

The real challenge is aligning talent strategy with a future that prizes adaptability over job security. This places HR leadership in ownership of the task of executing ethically and transparently while keeping C-suite, board, and shareholder values in mind.

Job Security Fears Hinder AI Training

Historically, big pharmaceutical industry manufacturers have been slow to adopt newer technologies. AI has been no different. As AI and analytics reshape the pharmaceutical and healthcare sectors, leaders face a critical responsibility: ensuring their workforce is ready.

Beyond just training, the real challenge lies in overcoming resistance to change, bridging digital skill gaps, and integrating new tools into daily workflows. Many professionals, especially in heavily regulated industries, like pharma, may fear automation or lack confidence in applying AI practically. That’s where targeted upskilling becomes vital.

At the Accreditation Council for Medical Affairs (ACMA), we work with 300+ pharma and biotech companies and address this challenge through our accreditation, certification and training offerings for the life sciences.

For example, the Board CertifiedMedical Affairs Specialist (BCMAS) board certification, which now integrates AI literacy as a core competency, has become the standard board certification for medical science liaison and medical affairs professionals worldwide.

Along with our other training and certification programs, we help life sciences professionals not only adapt to evolving technologies but also apply them responsibly within medical affairs and field reimbursement functions.

Today’s leaders must invest in structured, credible learning frameworks because future success depends not just on having AI tools, but on empowering people to use them effectively and compliantly.

Resistance Hinders Pharma AI Adoption

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.

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The Unspoken Exit: How Quiet Firing Poisons Your Team

The Unspoken Exit: How Quiet Firing Poisons Your Team

Quiet firing—passively pushing employees out through neglect or reduced opportunities—poses a significant HR challenge, eroding workplace morale and trust.

This HR Spotlight article compiles insights from business leaders and HR professionals on its most detrimental effects.

Experts highlight how quiet firing undermines psychological safety, fosters fear-based cultures, and triggers widespread disengagement, with some noting productivity drops of up to 23% in affected teams.

They warn of damaged employer brands and increased turnover, costing thousands in recruitment.

By fostering transparent communication, regular check-ins, and supportive training, leaders can counter these effects, ensuring employees feel valued and engaged, ultimately preserving organizational trust and productivity in dynamic work environments.

Read on!

Let’s assume ‘quiet firing’ is unintentional – leaders simply fail to provide the training or support employees need, eventually pushing them to quit.

The real loss is the untapped potential of people you’ve already invested in. With today’s accessible HR tech, there’s no excuse not to create a learning culture and systems to support your employees’ career development.

The training can also surface hidden talents – sometimes even unknown by the employee. It gives leaders clearer insight, too: an engineer might thrive in sales, or a frontline worker may show strong leadership potential.

Great leaders connect every task to the organization’s mission, giving employees a clear sense of purpose. When people understand the “why” behind their work, they’re more likely to stay committed and engaged.

Quiet Firing Stifles Employee Potential

John Beaver
Founder, Desky

Quiet termination can have a major negative impact on employee trust and corporate culture. Employee dissatisfaction and disengagement result when they feel marginalized without clear communication.

Employee morale and productivity may suffer as a result of this lack of transparency, which may lead them to doubt their worth to the organization.

In my experience, this may be avoided with frequent, transparent check-ins. Our team’s trust and participation increased right away when we switched to more straightforward communication.

Being open and honest with workers about performance standards and expectations not only improves morale but also fortifies loyalty and increases productivity in general.

You run the danger of damaging your company’s fundamental culture in addition to employee attrition if you don’t already have these discussions. To build a more dedicated and productive team, open and sincere communication is crucial.

Lack of Transparency Erodes Trust

Dr. Chad Walding
Co-Founder & Chief Culture Officer, NativePath

Quiet firing does not simply destroy engagement. It destroys trust and creates uncertainty. Employees know that something is off and when they sense they are being pushed out or marginalized without being directly communicated with or acted upon, it creates a fear-based culture.

This often results in a heavy, toxic culture where people feel like no one alone has their back or is responding to the concerns they’re raising, which will likely lower retention and productivity.

At NativePath, we have always tackled performance concerns directly, without hesitation. We do same-day follow-up with team members when we address performance issues and clearly communicated expectations.

Building trust through communication will create a culture where employees want to improve performance instead of sabotaging the team with the feeling that they are being quietly fired.

Fear-Based Culture Lowers Retention

Matt Erhard
Managing Partner, Summit Search Group

The term “quiet firing” is a fairly recent addition to the lexicon, but the practice of pushing employees out through a lack of opportunities or poor treatment has been around for a while, and is unfortunately more common than many leaders would like to admit. I see it as a very short-sighted approach that can have a ripple effect, impacting both individuals and the broader business in the long-term.

Quiet firing can quickly erode the trust between employees and leadership. It undermines psychological safety when employees see a peer being sidelined with no communication as to why, and no opportunity to improve their performance.

This sends the message that the company views its employees as disposable, and that can quickly spread fear and uncertainty through the entire team. As a result, innovation and collaboration suffer.

The company’s employer brand is also damaged when they gain a reputation for quietly pushing people out. Candidates today do their homework, and sites like Glassdoor and LinkedIn make it easy for employees to share their experiences.

In short, if you become known as an employer or quietly fires team members, that can be a major problem for both retention and attracting new talent.

Trust Loss Harms Team Innovation

The most detrimental effect of quiet firing, from an HR perspective, is the profound erosion of trust and psychological safety across the entire organization, not just with the targeted employee.

When colleagues witness someone being quietly pushed out, whether it’s through a lack of opportunities, stagnant pay, or reduced responsibilities, it sends a chilling message to everyone else. It tells them that loyalty and hard work might not be reciprocated, and that the company values avoidance over honest communication.

This contradicts the idea that quiet firing is a “less painful” way to manage underperformance. The resulting environment of suspicion can reduce overall employee engagement by as much as 30%, leading to a decline in innovation, a reluctance to take initiative, and ultimately, a significant increase in voluntary turnover among your top performers.

No one wants to be the next target, so they look for greener pastures. This ripple effect of mistrust is incredibly difficult and expensive to repair, often costing tens of thousands of dollars in recruitment and training for replacements, far outweighing any perceived short term “benefit” of avoiding a difficult conversation.

Mistrust Reduces Engagement, Increases Turnover

From an HR perspective, the most detrimental effect of quiet firing is the loss of trust between employees and management.

When people feel sidelined or pushed out without honest feedback, it creates disengagement and low morale.

This not only affects the individual but can also spread across teams, leading to a toxic work culture and higher turnover.

Disengagement Creates Toxic Work Culture

Renante Hayes
Executive Director, Creloaded

As someone who’s witnessed quiet firing firsthand in my executive career, I can tell you its most devastating impact is the destruction of organizational trust at multiple levels.

When leaders gradually reduce an employee’s responsibilities, exclude them from meetings, or withhold feedback instead of addressing performance issues directly, the damage extends far beyond that individual.

I’ve seen how other team members quickly recognize this passive-aggressive approach, creating a culture of anxiety where everyone wonders if they might be next. This silent treatment creates a psychological ripple effect that decimates psychological safety.

In one organization I consulted with, productivity dropped 23% in departments where quiet firing was prevalent, as employees diverted energy to defensive strategies rather than innovation.

Most critically, the practice signals leadership cowardice that undermines an organization’s stated values. When actions contradict company principles, employees learn to distrust all communications from management.

Anxiety Undermines Psychological Safety

Marcus Denning
Senior Lawyer, MK Law

For me, the most valuable thing that is destroyed by silent termination is trust. I saw individuals who begin to believe that they are not worth much when bosses fail to communicate with them freely but resort to neglect or distance from them.

Not only is it poor leadership, but it even exposes you to being sued. I never stop fighting over a reasonable notice and hearing since fairness is not only the law, but that which holds a workplace together.

For me, when employees know that they can be fired any time they become terrified and their morale is very low.
That is why I have explained to companies that have suffered the consequences of not playing by the book, both financially speaking, and culturally. Nobody gains when silence is exchanged with trust.

Silent Termination Destroys Workplace Trust

Kaz Marzo
Operations Manager, Image-Acquire

As an Operations Manager who’s witnessed quiet firing firsthand, I can tell you its most devastating impact is the culture of fear it creates throughout an organization.

Last year, I watched a talented team member gradually stripped of responsibilities without explanation. The ripple effects were immediate and severe. Productivity dropped as colleagues worried they might be next. Trust in leadership plummeted, and our top performers began updating their resumes.

Quiet firing creates a toxic environment where employees spend more energy looking over their shoulders than doing quality work. The financial impact is equally destructive – we calculated that disengagement and subsequent turnover from this single incident cost us nearly $100,000 in lost productivity, recruitment, and onboarding.

Direct conversations about performance issues are challenging but infinitely more beneficial than the organizational damage caused by quiet firing tactics.

Fearful Culture Stems from Quiet Firing

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.

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