AI and the future of leadership: Rethinking talent, work and governance
Q4 In practice, some organizations are advancing rapidly in technology adoption while lagging in leadership and organizational capabilities. In your view, how can companies balance technological progress with leadership development in the AI era? For senior management, especially HR leaders, what capabilities need to be prioritized most urgently?
Many organizations are investing heavily in AI while neglecting the human capabilities required to use it effectively. This creates a classic misalignment: advanced tools in the hands of leaders who lack the judgment to deploy them well.
Balancing this requires treating leadership capability as a strategic priority, not a by-product. Companies need to invest in developing critical thinking, decision-making, and ethical reasoning, alongside technical skills. Otherwise, AI will amplify poor decisions rather than improve them.
For HR leaders, the most urgent priority is improving the quality of talent decisions. This includes using better data, adopting validated assessment methods, and focusing on potential rather than past experience. In a world where AI is ubiquitous, the real competitive advantage lies in how well you select, develop, and deploy people.
































