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Human Resources
01 December 2025 - 5 min read
As we head toward 2030, when Millennials and Gen Z will make up three-quarters of the global workforce, the demands are bigger, the pace is faster, and the pressure to adapt is real.
From AI integration to retention strategies and inclusive cultures, HR teams are being asked to lead on almost every major workplace shift. So, what do leading HR professionals know that we don’t?
Younger workers don’t want ping-pong tables and pizza Fridays. They want workplaces that live their values, prioritise flexibility and emotional wellbeing, and act with transparency. HR leaders who take culture seriously and align it with up-to-date policies are seeing better retention, stronger engagement, and a deeper sense of belonging across the business.
There’s often a disconnect between what organisations think “culture” is and what it actually is. Free snacks and hybrid work are nice perks to have, but they’re not culture. True culture is the lived experience of employees every day.
For Gen Z in particular, this distinction is crucial. Growing up in a digital-first world where values are constantly broadcast and scrutinised, this generation expects workplaces to embody principles like inclusion, equity, honesty, and sustainability.
Roughly nine in ten Gen Zs consider a sense of purpose to be important to their job satisfaction and well-being. Culture for them, is a baseline requirement for any employer they’ll commit to. In general, Gen Z is looking for:
Culture isn’t just a feel-good concept; it drives measurable business outcomes. To put it simply, strong cultures correlate with higher retention, because employees are less likely to leave a company that aligns with their values. Here are the tangible business outcomes that a strong company culture can bring to your organisation:
Leading HR teams can measure culture using pulse surveys, employee feedback, and performance metrics, turning it into a strategic advantage rather than an abstract ideal.
Gen Z also has brought with them long overdue conversations about DEI into the workplace. Topics once seen as taboo are now better understood as everyday issues affecting real people.
The context of Gen Z’s formative years matters. They came of age during a pandemic that forced everyone indoors, while the world outside was reckoning with major social change.
Isolated but constantly online, they joined global conversations about sexism, racism, mental health, and equality on platforms like TikTok and Reddit. They witnessed inequality and bias as lived experiences, shared in real time and livestreamed on their phones.
So, when Gen Z entered the workplace, they brought that awareness with them. They’re not afraid to call out issues when they see them, to ask uncomfortable questions, or to challenge “how things have always been done.”
Gen Z is often seen as a disruptive generation; they resist authority, demand authenticity and force accountability. But the reality is that their disruptiveness is merely a reflection of their unshakeable values.
They don’t expect their employers to be perfect, but they do expect them to learn and act accordingly. That’s where the best HR leaders stand out. Instead of treating DEI as a compliance checklist or something that’s just too complex to understand, they:
Leading HR teams aren’t avoiding difficult conversations; they understand that real DEI progress and meaningful inclusion take deliberate, imperfect action – not polished promises. Even small steps forward, guided by humility and intention, build the foundation of authentic change.
AI can build complex spreadsheets, but it can’t care about an employee the way an HR professional can. The good news? Embracing AI and automation helps reduce admin load so you can focus on people strategy (which is exactly what the new generations value most).
Even better, it gives you back the time and headspace to avoid burnout. Here’s how leading HR professionals are leveraging AI in their day-to-day:
Treat AI as a capable but inexperienced assistant. It can do the heavy lifting, but it needs your guidance, values, and judgement to really shine.
Here’s the interesting part: we often talk about AI in terms of efficiency. We talk about automation, predictive analytics, and eliminating repetitive tasks. All true, but that’s just the surface. The deeper truth is that AI forces HR to confront the essence of what it really means to be human at work.
When AI handles the operational work, leaders are forced to ask themselves: What’s uniquely human in this role? What’s my purpose? Why do I belong here? What makes someone belong here?
What remains is the part of HR that cannot be automated. Empathy, judgement, moral courage, ethical reasoning, the ability to inspire, to connect, and to read the unsaid. Human skills in their purest form.
In the end, AI doesn’t ask how we can be more like machines. It asks how we can be more fully, unmistakably human. That’s the question every HR leader must now answer.
The best HR leaders in 2026 are those who embrace change. They are creating workplaces where employees feel seen, heard, and valued. They are using technology to free time for strategy, connection, and growth.
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