AI is reshaping how companies organise labour, distribute decision-making and redesign internal operations, making workforce strategy a central part of AI adoption.
Writing for the World Economic Forum, Al-Futtaim Group HR director David Henderson argues that many AI projects fail because organisations focus too heavily on technology while neglecting the need to change work, accountability, and operational processes.
The article says successful AI adoption depends on how effectively businesses combine human judgement with machine-driven systems, rather than treating automation as a standalone software rollout.
Using Garry Kasparov’s ‘advanced chess’ model after his 1997 defeat to IBM’s Deep Blue as an example, Henderson highlights how humans working alongside computers eventually outperformed both machines and grandmasters operating independently.
He suggests the same principle is now emerging across modern enterprises, where stronger results come from integrating AI directly into operational workflows rather than isolating it in technical departments.
The article identifies four major responsibilities for HR leaders during AI transformation. As ‘design architects’, Chief Human Resources Officers are expected to redefine which decisions remain human-led, which become AI-assisted and how accountability is distributed across organisations. As ‘capability stewards’, they must build continuous AI learning systems rather than rely on occasional employee training programmes.
HR leaders are also described as ‘adoption catalysts’, responsible for helping frontline employees integrate AI into daily workflows, and as ‘transition guardians’, tasked with managing concerns linked to surveillance, bias, fairness, employability and workforce trust.
Several companies are cited as examples of that transition. Procter & Gamble embedded AI engineers and data scientists directly within operational business units rather than centralising them within analytics teams.
Zurich Insurance developed enterprise-wide AI learning systems focused on transferable skills and workforce redeployment, while Al-Futtaim enabled frontline retail teams to develop AI-supported customer recommendation systems through agile operational groups rather than top-down executive planning.
Why does it matter?
AI competitiveness increasingly depends on organisational adaptability instead of access to technology alone. Workforce redesign, reskilling systems, internal trust, and operational flexibility are becoming critical strategic advantages as automation expands across industries. WEF’s argument highlights how HR departments are evolving from administrative functions into central actors shaping AI governance, labour transformation, and long-term business resilience.
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