What AI is doing in HR
AI has entered the HR function through multiple channels. In recruitment: AI-powered applicant tracking systems screen CVs, rank candidates, schedule interviews, and in some cases conduct initial screening interviews via AI video tools (HireVue, Pymetrics). In learning and development: personalised learning platforms (Degreed, EdCast) deliver AI-curated training recommendations based on skills gaps and career goals. In HR operations: chatbots handle employee queries (holiday balances, payroll questions, policy lookups), automated workflows handle onboarding documentation and offboarding checklists, and AI-assisted performance review tools aggregate 360 feedback and draft review summaries.
The administrative workload of an HR department, which previously required significant headcount, is being substantially reduced by these tools. HR departments at large organisations have been able to serve increasing employee populations without proportional headcount growth through automation.
What HR professionals still do best
The parts of HR that remain deeply human are those that involve employee relationships at their most complex and sensitive: employment dispute handling, performance management conversations, redundancy processes, culture change programmes, senior leadership development, and employee relations in crisis situations. These require emotional intelligence, legal judgment, and organisational understanding that AI tools cannot yet replicate. The HR Business Partner who can navigate a complex grievance, coach a struggling senior leader, and manage a restructuring announcement with care and credibility provides value that a workflow tool cannot.
The future of HR careers
HR is bifurcating. Operational HR (admin, data entry, policy distribution, first-line query handling) is heavily automated. Strategic HR (organisational design, culture, senior ER, executive development, M&A people integration) is growing in importance as organisations navigate transformation. HR professionals who develop genuine organisational effectiveness expertise, strong employment law knowledge, and the ability to advise senior leaders on complex people challenges are well-positioned. Those whose primary skill is HR administration and process management are significantly exposed.