Each week, as SHRM’s executive in residence for AI+HI, I scour the media landscape to bring you expert summaries of the biggest AI headlines — and what they mean for you and your business.
1 .Shopify’s CEO Makes AI Use Mandatory, Ties It to Headcount Decisions
What to Know:
In an internal memo shared publicly, Shopify CEO Tobi Lütke announced that effective AI use is now a “baseline expectation” for all employees. He warned teams not to request additional headcount or resources unless they could prove artificial intelligence can’t handle the task. Lütke called AI a “100x multiplier” and emphasized learning to use it well as a core skill. Shopify will now include AI proficiency in performance reviews and require AI use in prototype design.
Why It Matters:
This is one of the clearest corporate mandates yet stipulating that AI use is not optional. Shopify is not just encouraging experimentation — it’s operationalizing AI as a default productivity tool. HR and team leaders should take note: AI fluency is becoming a prerequisite for performance, staffing, and internal advancement.
2. The Cybernetic Teammate: AI in Real-World Teams at P&G
What to Know:
A randomized controlled trial at Procter & Gamble tested how generative AI performs as a teammate. In the study, individuals using GPT-4 performed as well as two-person teams without AI, while AI-enabled teams delivered the highest-quality solutions overall. AI use also eliminated professional silos between commercial and R&D staff, enabling more integrated thinking. Less experienced employees closed performance gaps, and AI users reported more positive emotions and less stress.
Why It Matters:
This study reframes AI as more than a productivity tool — it can replicate many benefits of human teamwork, including performance gains, expertise sharing, and emotional engagement. For HR and business leaders, the implication is clear: AI fluency may soon be a team design strategy, not just an individual skill set.
3. Accenture’s AI Tool Enhances Employee Feedback and Performance Reviews
What to Know:
Accenture’s CHRO reports that the company’s AI tool has significantly improved the quality of employee feedback. By assisting employees in articulating their thoughts more effectively, the AI tool has enabled managers to gain a comprehensive view of an employee’s performance throughout the year. This advancement addresses the common challenge of vague or unhelpful feedback in performance evaluations.
Why It Matters:
This development underscores the transformative potential of AI in human resources, particularly in enhancing the feedback process. By facilitating more meaningful and constructive feedback, AI tools like Accenture’s can lead to more accurate performance assessments and improved employee development.
4. From One to Many: AI Agents and the Hyperscaling of Human Thought
What to Know:
Microsoft’s Christopher J. Fernandez outlines how AI agents are transforming internal innovation and workforce design. Employees at all levels are encouraged to build their own agents using tools such as Copilot Studio — no coding required. Microsoft is deploying both structured (“walled garden”) and flexible (“open garden”) agent development environments to support experimentation and scale. AI agents are now used for everything from employee self-service to internal knowledge sharing, with Fernandez predicting that personal “build lists” of agents may soon be more valuable than resumes.
Why It Matters:
This is a case study on how to operationalize agentic AI. Fernandez positions agents not as replacements but as extensions of human insight — tools for unlocking distributed innovation across a large organization.
5. MIT Media Lab Launches Its AHA Program: Advancing Humans with AI
What to Know:
The AHA (Advancing Humans with AI) program is a cross-disciplinary initiative focused on designing AI systems that support human flourishing. Led by MIT Media Lab faculty, the program asks how AI can be deployed not just for utility, but for social, emotional, cognitive, and ethical advancement. Core research areas include comprehension, well-being, curiosity, creativity, and purpose. Methods include prototyping new AI-human interactions, testing emotional and social outcomes, and exploring AI’s impact on identity and agency.
Why It Matters:
This program signals a shift in AI R&D — from performance to purpose. AHA positions AI as a force for expanding human potential rather than automating it away. For HR, L&D, and innovation leaders, it offers a new lens: How do we design AI not just to work for us but to make us better? This is a research agenda for the age of human-AI co-evolution.
An organization run by AI is not a futuristic concept. Such technology is already a part of many workplaces and will continue to shape the labor market and HR. Here's how employers and employees can successfully manage generative AI and other AI-powered systems.