Here’s where HR leaders think the industry is headed—and how they need to prepare

By Azure GilmanDeputy Leadership Editor
Azure GilmanDeputy Leadership Editor

Azure Gilman is the former deputy editor for the Leadership desk at Fortune, assigning and editing stories about the workplace and the C-suite.

Emma BurleighBy Emma BurleighReporter, Success
Emma BurleighReporter, Success

    Emma Burleigh is a reporter at Fortune, covering success, careers, entrepreneurship, and personal finance. Before joining the Success desk, she co-authored Fortune’s CHRO Daily newsletter, extensively covering the workplace and the future of jobs. Emma has also written for publications including the Observer and The China Project, publishing long-form stories on culture, entertainment, and geopolitics. She has a joint-master’s degree from New York University in Global Journalism and East Asian Studies.

    HR leader talks with executives.
    Here's where the HR industry is heading, according to people leaders.
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    Good morning!

    There’s no doubt about it: HR is going through some major transformations. CHROs are rising to prominence, executive are thinking about the function differently, and AI is fundamentally changing the way practitioners do their work. Tomorrow is unwritten, but a recent survey of HR leaders may give us some indication as to where the industry is headed. 

    Around 84% of CHROs expect the function to become more automated and tech enabled, according to Mercer’s 2024 Voice of the CHRO Report, which polled HR and people leaders from 183 organizations. Another 65% say that the traditional HR skill set will diversify to focus more on non-traditional areas, including technology, analytics, scenario planning and business operations. And around 79% of CHROs say the function will be more aligned with business strategy.

    That’s a fundamental rethink of how many businesses have treated their HR departments in the past. “HR needs to be a true partner, versus HR being an order taker,” Shari Chernack, a senior principal of transformation at Mercer and a co-author of the report, tells Fortune. “Every time an organization wants to make an acquisition, wants to create a new product line, or open a new site, if HR is not at the table for these things as a critical decision maker and enabler, these things don’t happen.”

    These future CHRO predictions are aspirational to a point, and where leaders think they’re headed—not necessarily where they are today. Preparing for that future means taking ownership of their organization’s AI transformation, developing their skill sets, and being intentional about building C-suite relationships, according to the report.

    But amid all the heady talk of technology and the future, CHROs shouldn’t forget that the job comes down to people. Prioritizing the needs and expectations of talent, retaining that talent, and building an internal HR team that is better able to take on a new slew of responsibilities will all be key to CHRO success as well. 

    “One of the things we want to make sure we definitely don’t lose focus on is employee experience,” says Jonathan Gordin, an HR effectiveness partner at Mercer and co-author of the report. “What is their experience going to be like? How do we make sure that there’s a really good value prop for them?

    Azure Gilman
    azure.gilman@fortune.com

    Around the Table

    A round-up of the most important HR headlines.

    Conferences and corporate retreats are back on the rise as many hybrid companies are looking to throw get-together events, driving up demand for hotel spaces. WSJ

    Jensen Huang says he likes to ask one in-depth question every job interview, and that he reaches out to their references to ask them questions that he’d ask the candidate. Business Insider

    A former Delta flight attendant filed a lawsuit against the airline company alleging he was fired for his union support and reporting “sexually assaultive touching” during training. The Guardian

    Watercooler

    Everything you need to know from Fortune.

    No quick fix. Morgan Stanley projects that Europe’s workforce will shrink 6.5% by 2040 as people are living longer and birth rates are falling. —Ryan Hogg

    New paths. Kamala Harris has laid out an economic plan aimed at Black men, appealing to an essential voting bloc, that would offer more apprenticeships and entrepreneurship loans to the community. —Will Weissert, AP

    Automation anxiety. Amazon has built another robot-powered warehouse outside of Nashville, raising questions about how it will impact the company’s human labor force and what the benefits look like. —Jason Del Rey

    This is the web version of Fortune CHRO, a newsletter focusing on helping HR executives navigate the needs of the workplace. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.