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2025-04-17 22:35:00| Fast Company

The Fast Company Impact Council is an invitation-only membership community of leaders, experts, executives, and entrepreneurs who share their insights with our audience. Members pay annual dues for access to peer learning, thought leadership opportunities, events and more. While talent intelligence platforms (TIPs) serve an important purpose in identifying skills, they are inherently limited and never designed to address the fundamental question: How is work itself structured and how is it changing?  AI has dramatically magnified and accelerated those pre-existing limitations. Its not just creating new skill gapsits redefining work at its core. Yet most organizations are still trying to track skills like its 2020.  In the next few decades, AI is projected to transform up to 70% of all job tasks across industriesnot just by replacing work, but by fundamentally reshaping how work gets done, who does it, and what value it creates.  Past technological shifts unfolded over decades; todays agentic AI is reshaping entire industries in a matter of months.  Work intelligence is the next evolution: a strategic, systems-level approach that moves beyond skills to decode how work itself is being restructuredtask by task, role by role, organization by organization.  Why TIPs were never the full solution  Many companies have invested in TIPssystems that identify emerging skills by analyzing job postings and creating “living taxonomies” to inform talent practices. While valuable as a first-generation approach, TIPs suffer from a fundamental limitation: They’re inherently reactive.  By analyzing existing job postings and making projections, TIPs create a perpetual time lag. By the time organizations identify, develop, and deploy these skills, the landscape has already shifted. With AI changing jobs faster than companies can update talent strategies, organizations need to look beyond current skills to understand how work itself is being reimagined.   Skills are changing because work is changing  The rapid evolution of skills isnt the root challengeits a symptom of a deeper issue. AI has simply brought this issue to the forefront: Work itself is changing.   Skills development remains importantbut it must be anchored in a deeper understanding of how work is transforming. Organizations investing in skills programs haven’t wasted their efforts, but they need to evolve their approach to connect it with work redesign. Otherwise, even robust skills initiatives wont deliver lasting value in an AI-transformed landscape.  Failing to grasp how work is transforming leads to:  Blind workforce decisions  Hiring for roles that wont exist  Reskilling for skills that wont matter next year  Ignoring AIs fundamental impact on work design  Work intelligence is a smarter way to navigate AI disruption  Work intelligence begins with a comprehensive understanding of the work itselfthe outcomes, tasks, processes, and roles that drive business value.  Advanced work intelligence systems can analyze work across industries and create a universal language of work that integrates with existing organizational structures. This deep understanding enables business leaders to:  Eliminate redundancies across roles: Consolidating overlapping responsibilities into fewer roles can reduce coordination costs while creating more meaningful work.  Identify AI automation opportunities: Work intelligence can pinpoint exactly which tasks are prime for automation, which tools can accomplish this, and how to reallocate remaining human tasks.  Optimize end-to-end process flows: By analyzing entire workflows, leaders can redesign processes to leverage AI and human capabilities. In customer service, automating initial contact while routing complex inquiries to specialists might reduce process steps by 30%.  Focus talent development strategically: Work intelligence anticipates the roles and skills emerging from these transformations before implementation. This enables proactive talent development that runs parallel to work redesign efforts. Organizations can build learning paths aligned with their future work design, ensuring investment in capabilities that drive business value while preparing employees for meaningful roles in advance of changes.  The future of work design  This approach creates a fundamentally different talent ecosystem where roles, skills, and capabilities evolve naturally from optimized work processes. While competitors struggle with isolated AI initiatives or broad automation targets, leaders with work intelligence can make precise, strategic decisions about where to invest in technology and human capabilities.  Redesign work for the AI era  What organizations face isn’t merely a skills problemit’s a fundamental workforce capability challenge accelerated by AI transformation.   The most successful organizationsthose reengineering work with the future in mindwill be able to answer these critical questions:  Which work should be done by humans versus AI?  How should we reorganize roles and processes around these new capabilities?  What truly human capabilities should we develop in our workforce?  How can we create systems that continuously evolve as technology advances?  Transform your organization with work intelligence  Don’t wait for AI to disrupt your workforce. The competitive advantage gap is already widening between organizations that proactively redesign work and those that merely react to change.  Heres how to start your work intelligence journey:  Assessment: Begin with a rapid, data-driven assessment of your current work design using work intelligence tools that quickly identify high-value transformation opportunities.  Pilot project: Select a high-impact process to redesign using work intelligence principles.  Strategic roadmap: Develop a phased approach to implementing work intelligence across your organization, aligned with your broader business strategy.  Capability building: Equip your leaders with the tools and mindsets to lead transformation through a work intelligence lens.  The market leaders of tomorrow aren’t just adapting to AI disruptionthey’re actively harnessing it to reshape work, drive value, and create meaningful roles that maximize human potential.  Siobhan Savage is cofounder and CEO of Reejig. Amy Wilson is product strategy advisor at Reejig. 


Category: E-Commerce

 

LATEST NEWS

2025-04-17 22:01:00| Fast Company

Chapter, a Medicare advisory startup cofounded by Vivek Ramaswamy, announced on Wednesday it has closed on $75 million in Series D funding, at a valuation of $1.5 billion, backed by venture firm Stripes, and a number of private equity investors. Ramaswamy, a biotech entrepreneur, was an early adviser to President Donald Trump’s second term and is a former Republican presidential candidate. Chapter told Fast Company that while Ramaswamy helped found the company in 2020, “he stepped down from the board when he ran for office and is no longer involved in the company.” What does Chapter do? The platform helps the nation’s seniors navigate the Medicare system and choose a health plan, prescription drug coverage, find doctors and hospitalsall of which can be challenging for elderly Americans. Navigating Medicare is needlessly complex. Too many people end up with plans that cost more and cover less than they should, Cobi Blumenfeld-Gantz, Chapter’s cofounder and CEO, said in statement. At a time when the regulatory environment and Medicare ecosystem is rapidly changing, we remain committed to bringing transparency and trust to a system that desperately needs it. Blumenfeld-Gantz told Fast Company that its “mission is to provide unbiased, consumer-first Medicare guidance to all Americans” as Medicare insurance carriers continue to change their benefits structure, and as regulations have continued to be updated over the past five years. The startup has at least historical links to the Trump administration, including to current Vice President JD Vance and tech billionaire Peter Thiel, who helped fuel Vance’s rise in politics. Narya Capital, which Vance founded before leaving to run for office, led Chapter’s Series A funding; Thiel has invested in the company, and at one time, held a seat on the board, according to TechCrunch. Blumenfeld-Gantz said Vance has no involvement in Chapter. It’s worth noting Ramaswamy was previously involved with the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), along with Tesla CEO Elon Musk, which critics say could affect Medicare’s ability to perform business as usual. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), which houses Medicare, is facing a massive overhaul, including staff layoffs, as DOGE slashes budgets and staff across federal agencies. At HHS alone, some 10,000 employees have been laid off, and combined with early retirements, the administration has slashed some 20,000 jobs, per CNN. Meanwhile, HHS secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will reportedly cut at least 300 jobs from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), which, among other programs, oversees Medicare and Medicaid for some 160 million Americans, as the administration tries to downplay the reduction and its effect on the Medicare, according to CNBC.


Category: E-Commerce

 

2025-04-17 20:01:59| Fast Company

New Jersey filed a lawsuit against Discord on Thursday, alleging that the social platform recklessly exposed children to “harassment, abuse, and sexual exploitation by predators who lurk on the platform.” The move makes it the first state to sue Discord. Founded in 2015, Discord is a platform where its millions of users can communicate in chatrooms and direct messages. It shot up in popularity during the Covid-19 pandemic, when many users were stuck at home and wanted to connect. Children, in particular, make up a “significant portion” of its 200 million global monthly active user base, per the suit. The New Jersey complaint alleges that Discord knew its safety features and policies wouldn’t actually protect its young user base and didn’t make changes. Discord markets itself as a safe space for children, despite being fully aware that the applications misleading safety settings and lax oversight has made it a prime hunting ground for online predators seeking easy access to children, Attorney General Matthew Platkin said in a release announcing the lawsuit. These deceptive claims regarding its safety settings have allowed Discord to attract a growing number of children to use its application, where they are at risk. We intend to put a stop to this unlawful conduct and hold Discord accountable for the harm it has caused our children. Discord, for example, doesn’t allow users under the age of 13. However, the platform only requires users to enter their date of birth when creating an account and uses no other systems to verify age. The suit also alleged the platform made it simple for malicious actors to send children explicit content due to its default safety settings. “As a result of Discords decisions, thousands of users were misled into signing up, believing they or their children would be safe, when they were really anything but,” Platkin said in the statement. The complaint cited a number of instances where adults in New Jersey were accused of using the platform to contact children and attempted to engage in conversation, solicit nude pictures and videos, and engage in sexual performance while video chatting. Discord, for its part, is reportedly denying the attorney general’s claims. In a statement shared with Fast Company, it said: “Discord is proud of our continuous efforts and investments in features and tools that help make Discord safer. Given our engagement with the Attorney Generals office, we are surprised by the announcement that New Jersey has filed an action against Discord today. We dispute the claims in the lawsuit and look forward to defending the action in court. New Jersey has taken part in past lawsuits targeting social media platforms for alleged unlawful contact relating to children. It sued TikTok based on “features that keep children and teens online for ever-increasing amounts of time despite the harms that result” and Meta for similar alleged conduct.


Category: E-Commerce

 

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