Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
How employers can guide knowledge workers through the AI shift
The Mercury
|September 09, 2025
IN THE boardroom, we call it risk management. In HR, resilience. In marketing, futureproofing. What we all really want is accurate predictions on when what is going to change, and solutions on how to delay - or ideally, prevent - the impact of those predictions.
When the advice to quell this fear-fuelled need for predictions is “you can’t prevent it, you have to adapt to it’, we however refuse to accept it.
Instead, we lay the responsibility for adaptation at someone else’s feet, or we launch initiatives to figure out how to be the one company that withstands the storm and remain “resilient” while others experience ruin.
Or we create and try to enforce preventative rules that simply result in busy work we can use to make ourselves feel more in control. All this is merely masking our ongoing search for an answer that will better align with how we thought/ hoped/planned things would be in our future.
To effectively respond to looming change (with the added threat of mass layoffs due to advancements in Artificial Intelligence (AI)), knowledge workers - and their employers - don’t need more predictions on what exactly will happen over the next two years as AI wrecks well-laid plans like coffee spilled over last-minute homework. They (we) need to buckle down and get to work. Different work.
Refocus training and development
Bu hikaye The Mercury dergisinin September 09, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
The Mercury'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
The Mercury
South Africa’s G20 moment exposes deep cracks at home and abroad
OUR COUNTRY is not in the space it should be in. As a host of G20 we would have loved to be a shining star that had dealt poverty a blow, a place where corruption was dealt with firmly, where children have a brighter future, taps are not only running but are oozing label blue water, with smooth streets, where women feel safe, and children are assured of a meal daily.
4 mins
November 24, 2025
The Mercury
DA strongly condemns Stellenbosch University internships with race quotas
THE DA condemns the recent advertising of internships by the University of Stellenbosch's Department of Agronomy which are only available to certain races.
1 min
November 24, 2025
The Mercury
Addressing child hunger in SA amidst food waste
ON reading reports and hearing radio programmes on the amount of children starving in South Africa, I was absolutely horrified.
1 min
November 24, 2025
The Mercury
Talking teddy bear's disturbing chats
AN “adorable” Al-powered talking teddy bear has been pulled from the shelves in the US after offering some shocking advice, according to HuffPost.
1 mins
November 24, 2025
The Mercury
Boks make powerful statement in Dublin, clinching victory
DAMIAN Willemse’s finger-to-the-lips celebration after scoring the first try in the corner, followed by Rassie Erasmus’ satisfied thumbs-up to the crowd after the whistle, was a picture-perfect opening and ending to the Test in Dublin for the Springboks.
1 mins
November 24, 2025
The Mercury
G20 Summit ends but tension between SA and US far from over
South Africa defends its G20 presidency against US criticism
3 mins
November 24, 2025
The Mercury
Hooray for my English teacher who taught me satire
FOR those pupils that played hooky to catch fish while educators were teaching \"metaphors\" \"irony\", \"sarcasm\", etc, and others who missed my tongue-in-cheek take in The Mercury last week regarding the \"swarms\" of Palestinians who would soon not only invade our free country, take-over all our green fields, set up their throne in New Pretoria, and even shunt all of us \"indigenous\" Indian, White and Black people into a fenced off area in the northern Cape, after the international powers that be justified all of that, by \"just saying\" that the \"Palestinians were always here\" and were, in present-time, actually experiencing a holocaust of their own, back home, so really deserved to be freely commuted here: Excuse me!
1 min
November 24, 2025
The Mercury
Jacob Zuma seeks leave to appeal R28.9m repayment order
FORMER President Jacob Zuma will turn to the Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, on December 1, 2025, in a bid to obtain leave to appeal last month's judgment ordering him to pay back the costs incurred during his private litigation over the years - reaching slightly more than R28.9 million.
2 mins
November 24, 2025
The Mercury
Zuma's daughters embroiled in conflict over South Africans lured to fight in Ukraine
CHILDREN of former state president Jacob Zuma are “at war” with each other over the luring of South Africans to fight in the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
2 mins
November 24, 2025
The Mercury
IFP welcomes repo rate cut, urges action for economic recovery
THE Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) welcomes the decision by the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) to reduce the repo rate by 25 basis points, bringing it down from 7.00% to 6.75%.
1 mins
November 24, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

