Traditional hiring practices have long relied on intuition and subjective judgment to identify the right candidates. However, forward-thinking organizations are discovering that applying rigorous data-driven methods to talent acquisition can improve both the quality and predictability of hiring decisions. READ MORE
Why AI Is Making 1:1 Meetings Irrelevant
For decades, the one-on-one meeting has been a sacred ritual of managerial life. It’s the office equivalent of a treadmill session: repetitive, well-intentioned, and mostly endured out of guilt.
Conventional wisdom says every manager should have regular 1:1s with their direct reports to build trust, boost engagement, and drive performance. However, as work evolves—with a faster pace, flatter structures, hybrid and asynchronous communication, AI tools that manage tasks more efficiently than most humans ever will—it’s worth asking: Do we still need all these 1:1s? READ MORE
Will your job survive AI?
In recent weeks, several prominent executives at big employers such as Ford and J.P. Morgan Chase have been offering predictions that AI will result in large white-collar job losses.
Some tech leaders, including those at Amazon, OpenAI, and Meta have acknowledged that the latest wave of AI, called agentic AI, is much closer to radically transforming the workplace than even they had previously anticipated. READ MORE
Tech salaries revealed
The AI talent wars are burning hot, and the tech salaries being dished out for top talent are even hotter.
Thanks to data from federal filings, we have a window into tech companies' salary ranges during a heated moment in Silicon Valley's talent wars. READ MORE
The rise of fractional executive leadership: What’s driving the interest?
The complexities that the COVID-19 pandemic brought to the world of work—employees suddenly working from home, safety concerns, supply chain disruptions—prompted HR professionals to prioritize agility in their strategies like never before. Five years later, today’s complexities, experts say, are again driving a reimagining of long-held norms—including about leadership, giving rise to alternative models like fractional executive leadership.
A fractional leadership model enables veteran C-suite executives to contribute to an organization on a part-time basis. It’s a strategy employers often leverage to navigate a particular project or moment of change or complexity—while shortening the time and expense of an often months-long executive search and reducing the risks of long-term hiring. READ MORE
10 ways to tackle the growing problem of unauthorized AI at work
The rise of artificial intelligence has brought both opportunities and challenges to the workplace. However, a growing trend of employees using free or unauthorized AI tools poses significant risks, from security breaches to the loss of trade secrets. Recent reports indicate that some workers are engaging with AI in ways that are not authorized by the employer, highlighting the importance of establishing policies and protocols that will enable responsible and deliberate adoption and use of AI at work. READ MORE
Office workstations could get even smaller
Employers — along with their finance executives, real estate and human resource departments — have been faced with many new challenges around work policies and how to budget for and find the right office setup since the pandemic accelerated the popularity of remote and hybrid work more than five years ago. READ MORE
US corporate bankruptcies hit 15-year H1 high: S&P
Finance leaders of the companies tracked by S&P have been increasingly turning to the courts for bankruptcy protection since 2022 when interest rates began to rise as the Federal Reserve sought to combat inflation. They’ve risen from 373 in 2022 to 634 in 2023, touching 688 last year.
So far this year, the distress has been concentrated in industrial and so-called consumer discretionary companies which accounted for a combined 107 bankruptcies, followed by healthcare firms (27) and corporations in the consumer staples sector (19). READ MORE
The Supreme Court Just Took Aim at Nationwide Injunctions. Could the FTC’s Noncompete Rule Rise from the Dead?
Most people didn’t connect the dots between last week’s Supreme Court decision in Trump v. CASA and the FTC’s ban on noncompetes.
But maybe they should. READ MORE
US manufacturing mired in weakness as tariffs bite
U.S. manufacturing remained sluggish in June, with new orders subdued and prices paid for inputs creeping higher, suggesting that the Trump administration's tariffs on imported goods continued to hamper businesses' ability to plan ahead.
The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) said on Tuesday that its manufacturing PMI nudged up to 49.0 last month from a six-month low of 48.5 in May. It was the fourth straight month that the PMI was below the 50 mark, which indicates contraction in the sector that accounts for 10.2% of the economy. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the PMI little changed at 48.8. READ MORE
Job openings unexpectedly increased in May
The “wait-and-see” is turning into a “just-can’t-wait-anymore.”
US employers moved forward on plans to increase their workforces in May, with the number of available jobs rising to a six-month high, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data released Tuesday. READ MORE
Getting a Wharton MBA Was 'a Waste of Time,' According to a Global Bank CEO. Here's the Degree He Recommends Instead.
Bill Winters, the CEO of 160-year-old bank Standard Chartered, says that the MBA he earned from the University of Pennsylvania Wharton School of Business was a "waste of time" — but the humanities undergraduate degree he received from Colgate University was more worth it.
In an interview that aired earlier this week, Bloomberg's Francine Lacqua asked Winters, 63, what he would recommend for young people to study. Winters responded by saying that he studied international relations and history as an undergraduate, graduating in 1983. He recommended those fields, stating that majoring in those areas taught him "how to think."
But his MBA from Wharton in 1988 was unnecessary, he said. READ MORE
Tech Leaders Predict a Human Hiring Boom as Workers Gain AI Skills
In the wake of the pandemic, companies were pushed into rapid digital transformation—ushering in a flood of new tools designed to support remote and hybrid workforces. But this digital acceleration came at a cost: employee burnout. In response, HR leaders began partnering more closely with IT and tech providers to streamline communication, ease cognitive overload and help teams stay productive under growing pressure.
At the heart of the problem was the constant barrage of emails, pings and alerts, all compounded by the ubiquity of smartphones. In response, digital wellness apps and mental health campaigns gained traction. Yet many missed the mark. This struggle to tame digital overload paved the way for the rise of employee experience platforms (EXPs). Platforms like ServiceNow emerged as early pioneers, creating unified environments where employees could access communications, resources and tools in one seamless interface. READ MORE
How enterprise AI is reshaping EX
In the wake of the pandemic, companies were pushed into rapid digital transformation—ushering in a flood of new tools designed to support remote and hybrid workforces. But this digital acceleration came at a cost: employee burnout. In response, HR leaders began partnering more closely with IT and tech providers to streamline communication, ease cognitive overload and help teams stay productive under growing pressure.
At the heart of the problem was the constant barrage of emails, pings and alerts, all compounded by the ubiquity of smartphones. In response, digital wellness apps and mental health campaigns gained traction. Yet many missed the mark. This struggle to tame digital overload paved the way for the rise of employee experience platforms (EXPs). Platforms like ServiceNow emerged as early pioneers, creating unified environments where employees could access communications, resources and tools in one seamless interface. READ MORE
See the white-collar jobs where open positions are dwindling — and where they're growing
Jobs are scarce and wages are stagnant for white-collar workers compared to the boom of a few years ago.
White-collar job postings nationwide are shrinking faster than their blue-collar equivalents, Revelio Labs, a workforce intelligence company, found. Those postings fell 12.7% compared to blue-collar's 11.6% between Q1 2024 and Q1 2025. READ MORE
American workers are stuck in an ‘infinite workday
If you’ve ever complained that the modern workday is unending, you may be right.
According to a new report from Microsoft, employees are now experiencing an “infinite workday” of constant emails, meetings and notifications. They check their emails as early as 6 a.m., juggle meetings through the afternoon and then stay online well into the night. READ MORE
AI warnings are the hip new way for CEOs to keep their workers afraid of losing their jobs
Every few weeks, the Earth cries out for an artificial intelligence scare on a frequency heard only by tech CEOs. And lo, like a rain cloud over a parched valley, here comes Amazon boss Andy Jassy to shower us with fresh fear and dread.
In a memo sent to employees titled “Some thoughts on Generative AI,” Jassy spent 1,200 words largely rattling off examples of Amazon’s AI progress. It is making Alexa, its personal assistant software, “meaningfully smarter,” and turning its customer service chatbot into “an even better experience.” (How, and by what measure? He didn’t say. But “you get the idea,” he wrote.) READ MORE
3 Surprising Financial Benefits of Unretiring (It’s More Than Just a Salary)
Retirement isn’t always the final chapter — sometimes it’s just a pause.
One survey conducted by T. Rowe Price, found that millions of retirees have returned to work in search of financial and emotional benefits. Whether you miss the structure, the sense of purpose, or want to boost your bank account, more people are choosing to “unretire” and reenter the workforce.
And it turns out, the financial upsides go far beyond a steady paycheck. READ MORE
State AGs led by NY’s Letitia James pressure Meta to clean up investment scams on Facebook
A group of 42 state attorneys general are calling on Meta to curb the rise of investment scams on Facebook that fraudulently use the images of Warren Buffett and other famous figures, New York Attorney General Letitia James said Wednesday.
James said in a news release criminals are consistently evading Meta’s automated and human review systems to post fake ads that leave retail investors saddled with millions of dollars in losses. Her office continues to see the scams months after reporting them to Meta, she added. READ MORE
Dropbox CEO Drew Houston says mandating a return to office is 'like trying to force people back into malls and movie theaters'
Forcing workers back to the office for most of the workweek is pretty futile if you ask Drew Houston.
Houston, the CEO of Dropbox, equated office-first working arrangements to other relics of a pre-pandemic era in an episode of Fortune's "Leadership Next" podcast released Wednesday. READ MORE
