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.
The year 2025 is going to be a very intense one for artificial intelligence. I expect to see unexpected jumps in capability (like the ability of Genesis to train robots 430,000 times faster than reality) and agent proliferation. This week, I’ve gathered predictions for you from Sam Altman and Reid Hoffman.
1. Sam Altman’s Reflections on AI and the Future of Work
What to Know: Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, reflects on the rapid growth of the company, driven by ChatGPT’s success, and the challenges of building an organization around transformative technology. He predicts that AI agents will significantly reshape the workforce by 2025 and emphasizes iterative deployment as key to safe, effective integration. Superintelligence, the next frontier, holds potential to accelerate scientific breakthroughs and redefine work at scale. As Altman writes, “We are now confident we know how to build artificial general intelligence (AGI) as we have traditionally understood it.”
Why It Matters: Whether or not AGI will arrive faster than expected is still to be determined. However, you can count on agents accelerating this year, and that will be sufficient to begin disrupting tasks, which in turn can disrupt jobs.
2. AI as Empowerment: Reid Hoffman on Superagency
What to Know: Reid Hoffman, co-founder of LinkedIn and Inflection AI, introduces the concept of “superagency,” where AI tools such as ChatGPT empower individuals to achieve more autonomy, creativity, and productivity. He argues that AI can preserve individual freedom while fostering collective innovation, provided its design balances personal agency with centralized benefits such as public health management.
Why It Matters: Reid Hoffman’s concept of “superagency,” which amplifies human capabilities through AI, has profound implications for HR and the future of work. As AI enables employees to perform tasks and solve problems at higher levels, HR professionals must prepare for a workforce that requires new skills, greater adaptability, and the ability to leverage AI effectively. This transformation will not only change the nature of work but also demand a reimagining of how organizations support and develop their teams.
3. Technology’s Role in Workplace Productivity in 2025
What to Know: AI tools and technologies are poised to redefine workplace productivity, with 75% of organizations already using AI in some capacity. However, only a third have adequately trained their workforce, signaling a gap between potential and actual productivity gains. Experts emphasize the importance of training, reskilling, and creating functional workflows to maximize AI’s benefits. At the same time, some warn that overloading workplaces with technology could undermine focus and well-being.
Why It Matters: While AI adoption accelerates, the gap between implementation and workforce readiness will increasingly disrupt work processes. Without sufficient training and organizational alignment, productivity gains from AI will remain unrealized. Moreover, the transition to data-driven decision-making will shift management practices away from intuition, requiring leaders to rethink engagement and performance strategies.
4. 2025 AI Predictions and Their Impact on Enterprise Workers
What to Know: AI advancements are reshaping enterprise work, with predictions highlighting the rise of “shadow AI,” shrinking sales teams, and a shift in required skills. Workers and managers will need to adapt to new roles as AI automates tasks, handles decisions, and redefines workflows. Emerging AI technologies will also influence decision-making, communication, and productivity in organizations.
Why It Matters:
- “Shadow AI” Risks: Employees using unauthorized AI to automate jobs creates compliance and security challenges. Enterprises must address this with clear policies and governance.
- Sales Team Transformation: AI’s efficiency in prospecting and follow-ups will cut team sizes but double quotas, emphasizing strategic and relationship-focused roles.
- Role Shifts: Middle managers evolve into AI agent supervisors, while engineers focus on product sense over coding. This reshapes talent strategies across industries.
- Meeting Optimization: AI assistants analyzing meetings can reclaim up to 30% of work time, enhancing productivity.
- New Skills Demand: The rise of AI agent orchestration over traditional roles underscores the need for employers to train their workforce in how to supervise and leverage AI tools effectively.
Extra Credit:
- OpenAI’s o3 model introduces groundbreaking innovations, including program synthesis, natural language program search, and evaluator-based reasoning, marking a significant leap toward more adaptable AI systems. Despite achieving unprecedented Abstract and Reasoning Corpus benchmark scores, o3 also highlights challenges such as high computational costs and scalability limitations. The forthcoming o3-mini aims to balance performance and accessibility for enterprises experimenting with advanced AI.
- This Harvard Business School working paper examines the impact of GitHub Copilot, a generative AI tool for software development, on work processes. The publication finds that access to GitHub Copilot allows developers to shift focus from project management tasks to their core work of coding, with an increase in autonomous and exploratory tasks. Lower-ability workers benefit more from this shift, highlighting AI’s potential to reduce skill-based disparities in productivity.