AI is actually makes it harder to track work performance, so what should HR managers do?
Ultimately, the quality and integrity of the finished article are a human responsibility. But the questions this raises go well beyond everyday word processing.
Powerful AI is now changing what it means to be good at your work. The debate has moved from whether robots are taking over our jobs to who or what gets the credit for the work in a world of AI.
Three-quarters of global knowledge workers are now using AI, but many are uncertain about it.
About half of all surveyed workers feel uneasy about the future use of AI, and many say their organisations offer little guidance on responsible practice. Workers even hide their use of AI to avoid “AI shame”.
But for better or worse, we are learning to work with this powerful, fast and not always predictable new colleague.
For decades, companies relied on one big idea: people are their greatest asset.
Hire the best, train them well and results will follow. This thinking gave the human resources (HR) department its strategic role and made “talent” the key to success.
But this logic is starting to fail. When a junior lawyer uses AI to draft a contract in minutes, a task that once took a senior partner years to master, how do you measure skill?
The value is no longer in producing the first draft, but in the partner’s judgement and ability to spot the one clause that could cause a problem.
Performance reviews that evaluate individual productivity or achieved targets can’t see this kind of value. They miss the skills that now matter most: judgement, collaboration with machines, and ethical awareness.
If AI can outperform us in speed, accuracy and recall, what still makes humans valuable? It comes down to three things.
These are complex “soft skills” that blend technical awareness with human judgement, empathy and moral courage.
Most workplaces are still grading people with outdated scorecards. Employees are racing ahead with AI, but their organisations still evaluate them as if they are working alone.
A performance review that fits the AI age should ask different questions:
Those questions get to the heart of the new workplace. Success now depends less on what individuals produce and more on how well they work in partnership with AI.
HR systems have rested on one assumption: performance can be improved by developing individuals. Train people, motivate them and reward them, and productivity will rise. That made sense when most work depended on human effort.
But AI changes where capability resides. It spreads intelligence across humans and systems. Performance now depends on how effectively people and algorithms think together.
AI doesn’t just make us faster; it changes what “star worker” means.
The future of HR won’t be about managing people alone. It will be about managing relationships between people and intelligent systems.
AI already helps screen job applicants, track performance and flag inefficiencies. Used well, it can make workplaces fairer and more consistent. Used blindly, it risks turning them into systems of surveillance and bias.
This is why human judgement still matters. People bring context, empathy and conscience. They make sure decisions that look efficient on paper actually work in a complicated, human world.
Machines can generate answers. Only people can make them meaningful. So when it comes to performance, maybe the question isn’t “who gets the credit?” –
it’s “how well do we share the credit?”.![]()
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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