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The Jobs AI Can't Replace (And Why Human Work Isn't Going Away)

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You've seen the headlines: artificial intelligence is coming for white-collar work. Large language models can pass the bar exam, write code, and summarize a 40-page report in seconds. Generative AI tools are doing in minutes what used to take junior employees days. If you've found yourself staring at your coffee wondering whether your career path has an expiration date, you're not alone, and you're not being paranoid. But here's what those headlines tend to leave out, according to a recent analysis by Sequoia Capital : for every dollar companies spend on software, they spend six on people. It’s true; the job market is changing. It’s also true that human work isn't going away. The real story is more interesting than either the doom or the cheerleading: it's about which work, and why . What AI Is Actually Good At Let's give credit where it's due: understanding what AI systems genuinely do well is the only way to understand what they don...

Seasonal Employee Onboarding Done Right: From First Day to Final Season

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Most advice around seasonal hiring focuses on finding workers quickly, and there's no shortage of guidance on where to post, how to screen, and when to start . But the part that actually determines whether a seasonal hire helps your team or adds to its workload happens after the offer is accepted. Seasonal employee onboarding is one of the most overlooked parts of the seasonal hiring process. When time is tight and the busy season is already approaching, it's tempting to get new hires on the floor as fast as possible and let them figure out the rest. But without a clear onboarding process , even capable workers spend their first days navigating basics instead of contributing—and that costs more than most employers realize. The real measure isn't time-to-hire; it's time-to-productivity . Whether you're managing a summer retail floor, a hospitality operation, a warehouse running at peak capacity, or an office team stretched thin by vacation coverage, the underly...

Built for Constraint: Developing a Staffing Strategy in a Challenging Labor Market

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For many years, the dominant question in workforce planning was operational: how do we fill our open roles? Hiring managers refined their recruitment processes , shortened time-to-hire , and expanded sourcing channels. Staffing agencies scaled up, and job seekers were courted more aggressively. The underlying assumption in most of this activity was that the pipeline was operating as it had in the past: that skilled workers were available, that entry-level roles would continue feeding mid-level ones, and that the right combination of speed and incentive could close most staffing gaps. But what if those assumptions no longer hold? What if the staffing challenges affecting key industries, such as healthcare, logistics, manufacturing, and skilled trades, aren’t a phase to get through, but a new reality to operate in? The conditions that once made difficult roles sustainably fillable have become less reliable across many industries. Functioning talent pipelines , manageable workloa...