
在Guild庆祝成立十周年之际,我们回顾了自身在职场领域所经历的种种颠覆性变革。我们看到了各大行业招聘趋势和技能需求的变化、远程与混合办公策略的演变,以及代际偏好的变迁。如今展望未来,我们认为人们的工作与生活方式将发生更深刻的变革。
与我们交流的首席执行官和人力资源领导者尤为关注这些变化。无论走到哪里,人们都在问同一个问题:“人工智能会对我们的业务和员工带来什么影响?”我们的回答始终如一:墨守旧有的人才策略会让企业落后,而那些做出调整,也就是重塑招聘、培养和领导方式的企业将让业绩达到全新的高度。这一切始于拥抱以下四个关键转变。
从侧重成本到增长引擎
长久以来,人力资源与学习发展部门被视为企业处于边缘地位的配角。这个时代已经终结。在当前环境下,学习发展必须成为一项业务策略。
领导者不能孤立地关注员工的参与度、满意度甚至留存率。这些指标并非不重要,但仅关注这些指标远远不够。未来十年领导者必须关注:公司的人才策略是否能提供业务增长所需的技能、灵活性和文化?是否能用数据佐证这一策略的效果?
这种转变伴随着更严苛的自我审视。首席人力资源官必须准备好回答:投资学习发展领域会产生什么样的业务影响?内部流动会对运营利润率造成什么影响?领导层的就绪度如何推动关键指标?这是每一份人力资源守则都需要回答的核心业务问题。
学历vs证书:从绝对主义到战略再平衡
数十年来,企业依赖四年制大学来获取所需的人才。然而,随着人工智能的发展,技能需求的变化速度已超过传统学历教育的应对能力。
为应对这一挑战,人力资源领导者需制定专项策略,平衡四年制学历与可叠加短期培训证书之间的关系。可叠加证书对于学习者和雇主都是有益的,因为它既能解决公司人才紧缺领域持续的技能缺口,又能为学习者的可持续职业发展奠定基础。目前,近三分之二的Guild学员都在参加针对性的技能培训,这一现象反映了技术快速变化下劳动力需求的演变。
不过,切勿将此趋势误解为学历贬值。乔治城大学(Georgetown University)教育与劳动力中心预测,到2031年,美国42%工作岗位的招聘门槛起点依然是学士学位。学历仍是重要的基础,需要做出调整的是我们如何结合基础性学习与灵活可叠加的培养方式。企业必须招聘有潜力的员工,投资员工成长,拥抱兼顾证书与能力的学习模式。
从能力模型到实战准备
过去十年,我们了解到的一个事实在于:在人工智能时代,领导者必须能够在快速变化、通常充满不确定性的环境中管理模糊性,以同理心领导,并做出决策。仅凭技术专精来领导的做法在未来十年是行不通的。
因此,当今的领导力项目必须彰显体验感、实用性和个性化。领导者需要能够培养其信心、判断力和远见的环境,可以借助拓展性任务,也可采用轮岗计划或同僚学习小组等方式来实现。
与此同时,我们不能忽视人口结构现实。在美国,12%的劳动力,也就是最后一批婴儿潮时代的人群,将在未来十年退休。如果公司目前还没有建立强有力的领导梯队,那么便已然处于落后状态。公司现在就得启动继任计划,而且需覆盖组织架构中前5%以外的更多层级。
从权力转移到共同责任
新冠疫情改变了人们的工作方式以及对工作的认知。员工曾短暂获得了有史以来最强大的话语权。不过,这一态势再次发生转变,我们正迈向新的平衡:员工希望获得成长与安全感,而雇主看重的是适应力和绩效。这是一种基于共同责任的取舍。
为适应这个新时代,雇主必须加大对内部流动与职业发展的投入,挖掘公司内部的隐性人才,为他们提供清晰的成长路径和助力,并一路指导,让其融入公司。这些都是留住人才、提升人才就绪度的新工具。不过,员工的亦有其职责:拥抱持续学习理念,通过寻求反馈来学习和成长,以灵活性和适应力来应对新挑战。流动性的未来必须由双方共同构建。
未来十年的必选题
展望未来十年,人力资源领导者肩负着独特使命:赋予机构现有人才新的技能,支持他们成长,同时构建既能推动经营业绩又能促进员工向上流动的内部通道。做好这项工作不仅能让企业从容应对未来挑战,也将打造一个更包容、更有韧性、适用于未来职场的经济体系。
比贾尔•沙阿是Guild公司的首席执行官。强尼•泰勒是SHRM公司的总裁兼首席执行官。(财富中文网)
译者:冯丰
审校:夏林
在Guild庆祝成立十周年之际,我们回顾了自身在职场领域所经历的种种颠覆性变革。我们看到了各大行业招聘趋势和技能需求的变化、远程与混合办公策略的演变,以及代际偏好的变迁。如今展望未来,我们认为人们的工作与生活方式将发生更深刻的变革。
与我们交流的首席执行官和人力资源领导者尤为关注这些变化。无论走到哪里,人们都在问同一个问题:“人工智能会对我们的业务和员工带来什么影响?”我们的回答始终如一:墨守旧有的人才策略会让企业落后,而那些做出调整,也就是重塑招聘、培养和领导方式的企业将让业绩达到全新的高度。这一切始于拥抱以下四个关键转变。
从侧重成本到增长引擎
长久以来,人力资源与学习发展部门被视为企业处于边缘地位的配角。这个时代已经终结。在当前环境下,学习发展必须成为一项业务策略。
领导者不能孤立地关注员工的参与度、满意度甚至留存率。这些指标并非不重要,但仅关注这些指标远远不够。未来十年领导者必须关注:公司的人才策略是否能提供业务增长所需的技能、灵活性和文化?是否能用数据佐证这一策略的效果?
这种转变伴随着更严苛的自我审视。首席人力资源官必须准备好回答:投资学习发展领域会产生什么样的业务影响?内部流动会对运营利润率造成什么影响?领导层的就绪度如何推动关键指标?这是每一份人力资源守则都需要回答的核心业务问题。
学历vs证书:从绝对主义到战略再平衡
数十年来,企业依赖四年制大学来获取所需的人才。然而,随着人工智能的发展,技能需求的变化速度已超过传统学历教育的应对能力。
为应对这一挑战,人力资源领导者需制定专项策略,平衡四年制学历与可叠加短期培训证书之间的关系。可叠加证书对于学习者和雇主都是有益的,因为它既能解决公司人才紧缺领域持续的技能缺口,又能为学习者的可持续职业发展奠定基础。目前,近三分之二的Guild学员都在参加针对性的技能培训,这一现象反映了技术快速变化下劳动力需求的演变。
不过,切勿将此趋势误解为学历贬值。乔治城大学(Georgetown University)教育与劳动力中心预测,到2031年,美国42%工作岗位的招聘门槛起点依然是学士学位。学历仍是重要的基础,需要做出调整的是我们如何结合基础性学习与灵活可叠加的培养方式。企业必须招聘有潜力的员工,投资员工成长,拥抱兼顾证书与能力的学习模式。
从能力模型到实战准备
过去十年,我们了解到的一个事实在于:在人工智能时代,领导者必须能够在快速变化、通常充满不确定性的环境中管理模糊性,以同理心领导,并做出决策。仅凭技术专精来领导的做法在未来十年是行不通的。
因此,当今的领导力项目必须彰显体验感、实用性和个性化。领导者需要能够培养其信心、判断力和远见的环境,可以借助拓展性任务,也可采用轮岗计划或同僚学习小组等方式来实现。
与此同时,我们不能忽视人口结构现实。在美国,12%的劳动力,也就是最后一批婴儿潮时代的人群,将在未来十年退休。如果公司目前还没有建立强有力的领导梯队,那么便已然处于落后状态。公司现在就得启动继任计划,而且需覆盖组织架构中前5%以外的更多层级。
从权力转移到共同责任
新冠疫情改变了人们的工作方式以及对工作的认知。员工曾短暂获得了有史以来最强大的话语权。不过,这一态势再次发生转变,我们正迈向新的平衡:员工希望获得成长与安全感,而雇主看重的是适应力和绩效。这是一种基于共同责任的取舍。
为适应这个新时代,雇主必须加大对内部流动与职业发展的投入,挖掘公司内部的隐性人才,为他们提供清晰的成长路径和助力,并一路指导,让其融入公司。这些都是留住人才、提升人才就绪度的新工具。不过,员工的亦有其职责:拥抱持续学习理念,通过寻求反馈来学习和成长,以灵活性和适应力来应对新挑战。流动性的未来必须由双方共同构建。
未来十年的必选题
展望未来十年,人力资源领导者肩负着独特使命:赋予机构现有人才新的技能,支持他们成长,同时构建既能推动经营业绩又能促进员工向上流动的内部通道。做好这项工作不仅能让企业从容应对未来挑战,也将打造一个更包容、更有韧性、适用于未来职场的经济体系。
比贾尔•沙阿是Guild公司的首席执行官。强尼•泰勒是SHRM公司的总裁兼首席执行官。(财富中文网)
译者:冯丰
审校:夏林
As Guild celebrates its 10th anniversary, we look back at the immense amount of disruption we’ve navigated in the world of work. We saw fluctuating hiring trends and skilling needs across industries, evolving remote and hybrid work strategies, and changing generational preferences. But, now, as we look over the horizon, we see even more change in the way we work and live.
These changes are top of mind for CEOs and HR leaders we speak to. Everywhere we go, we get asked the same question: "What does AI mean for our business and workforce?" Our answer is always the same: Clinging to old talent playbooks will mean falling behind. But those who adapt—who reimagine how they hire, develop, and lead—will unlock entirely new levels of performance. It starts by embracing four critical shifts.
From cost center to growth engine
For too long, HR and Learning & Development (L&D) functions were treated as support roles at the periphery of the business. That era is over. In today’s environment, L&D must be the business strategy.
Leaders can’t afford to focus only on employee engagement, satisfaction, or even retention in isolation. These are still important—but they’re not nearly enough. What will matter in the next decade is whether—and how—your talent strategy is delivering the skills, agility, and culture your business needs to grow. And whether you can prove it with numbers.
With this shift comes greater scrutiny. CHROs must be prepared to answer questions about the business impact of L&D investments, internal mobility’s effect on operating margin, and how leadership readiness moves the needle. These are business questions that belong at the center of every HR playbook.
Degrees vs. credentials: From absolutism to a strategic rebalancing
For decades, companies relied on four-year colleges to supply the talent they needed. But as AI evolves, skill requirements shift faster than traditional degrees can keep up with.
To meet the moment, HR leaders must have a deliberate strategy for balancing the four-year degree and stackable, short-form credentials. Stackable credentials are designed to serve both the learner and the employer, filling urgent skill gaps in sectors with persistent talent shortages while laying the groundwork for sustained career growth. Today, almost two-thirds of Guild learners are pursuing targeted skill development, reflecting the evolving demands of a workforce shaped by rapid technological change.
But let’s not confuse this shift with the decline of the college degree. In fact, research from Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce projects 42% of U.S. jobs will require at least a bachelor’s degree by 2031. The degree remains a critical foundation. What’s changing is how we combine foundational learning with flexible, stackable development. We must all hire for potential, invest in growth, and embrace a model of learning that accounts for both credentials and competencies.
From competency models to real-world readiness
One thing we learned over the last decade was, in this age of AI, leaders must be able to manage ambiguity, lead with empathy, and make decisions in fast-moving, often uncertain environments. Technical excellence alone won’t cut it in the next decade.
That’s why today’s leadership programs must be experiential, practical, and personalized. Whether it’s through stretch assignments, rotational programs, or peer learning cohorts, leaders need environments where they can build confidence, judgment, and vision.
At the same time, we can’t ignore the demographic realities. In the United States, 12% of the workforce—the last wave of baby boomers—is set to retire within the next decade. If you don’t have a strong leadership pipeline in place today, you’re already behind. Succession planning must start now. And it must extend beyond the top 5% of your org chart.
From power shifts to mutual accountability
The pandemic changed how we work and how we think about work. For a brief moment, employees had more leverage than any other time in history. Now that dynamic is shifting again. We’re heading toward a new equilibrium—one where employees want growth and security, and employers need adaptability and performance. It’s a trade-off, and it’s built on mutual accountability.
To navigate this new era, employers must double down on internal mobility and career development. Identify the hidden talent already inside your company and give them clear, supported pathways to grow. Coach them, mentor them, engage them. These are the new levers of retention and readiness. But employees have a role to play, too. They must be willing to embrace the ethos of continuous learning, seek feedback to learn and grow, and confront new challenges with agility and adaptability. The future of mobility must be built together.
Our imperatives for the next decade
As we look to the next decade, HR leaders are uniquely positioned to skill, support, and grow the talent their organizations already have—building internal pipelines that drive both business performance and upward mobility for employees.If we get this right, we won’t just future-proof our organizations—we’ll build a more inclusive and resilient economy prepared for the future of work.