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    Home»Politics»Kwale»HR Leaders Challenged to Provide Greater Value to Talent in the Age of AI
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    HR Leaders Challenged to Provide Greater Value to Talent in the Age of AI

    Coast Times DigitalBy Coast Times DigitalSeptember 4, 2025Updated:September 7, 2025No Comments0 Views
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    By Alloys Musyoka

    Organizations have been challenged to build talent pipelines that are resilient, innovative, and fit for the future in the face of unprecedented disruption from artificial intelligence (AI), demographic shifts, and changing employee expectations.

    Speaking at the opening of the HR Summit 2025, Karim Anjarwalla, Senior Partner at ALN Kenya, Anjarwalla & Khanna reiterated the urgency of rethinking talent strategies, highlighting the profound shifts AI and technology are bringing to the world of work.

    “Artificial intelligence is not just changing what we do, but how we learn, how we hire, and how we lead. Unlike past innovations that amplified human productivity, AI risks removing human beings from the centre of work. This is one of the generational challenges of our time, and Africa must be proactive in responding,” he said.

    Mr Anjarwalla also noted that Africa faces a double challenge of bridging foundational education gaps while racing to catch up with AI’s exponential acceleration and emphasized that the real differentiator for organizations will be how they integrate talent and innovation to stay competitive.

    On his part, Sundeep Raichura, Zamara Group CEO pointed to the realities of AI, shifting demographics, debates around globalization and protectionism, and growing expectations for equity, flexibility, and inclusion in the workplace.

    “A few years ago, flexible work was seen as a perk. Today it’s a baseline expectation. AI was once dismissed as hype in HR circles, but in 2025, bots are reshaping talent acquisition, learning, and employee engagement. But the future of work cannot be about technology alone, it must be about people. Whether workplaces remain human-centered or become technology-dominated depends on the choices we make as leaders,” he emphasized.

    “Innovation must serve humanity and not replace it. HR leaders are no longer backroom administrators, but are strategists, culture shapers, and in many ways, the conscience of organizations. Africa’s workforce should be our greatest asset, future-ready, not future-fearful,” he added.

    Themed “Fit for Future”, this year’s Summit focuses on creating future-ready workplaces by addressing skills transformation, leadership resilience, and cultural adaptation. According to the World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report 2025, 83% of core skills will change by 2030, with AI literacy, data analysis, and technology fluency rising fastest.

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