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The Future of Work Exchange continues its series on 2024 Future of Work predictions, courtesy of the industry’s brightest thought leaders and executives. The below insights are peeks into what the year ahead may bring for organizations across the globe regarding talent, technology, and work optimization. (Check out Part I of our series here.)

“The workforce solutions landscape is evolving rapidly, driven by the impact of AI and its present and future influence on comprehensive total talent solutions. In this dynamic environment, the industry is positioned to break existing boundaries, harnessing technology in new and innovative ways. Emerging are more robust ecosystems that will provide integrated, transformative solutions. The widespread adoption of AI is set to reshape the course of the industry, empowering companies to excel in a fiercely competitive, skills-based talent market. The compelling combination of AI and human expertise is positioned to further reduce friction between talent and work, advancing the industry and effecting positive change.”Lori Hock, CEO, Opptly

“The healthcare landscape is evolving rapidly. Forget cookie-cutter approaches to recruiting and retaining top-tier clinicians in 2024. Expect facilities to embrace personalized staffing solutions – flexible schedules, internal gig options, and tailored international recruitment. It’s a dynamic ecosystem, and specialized support companies, with their diverse technology and services, will be vital partners for healthcare organizations navigating this terrain.”Matt Jensen, SVP Client Services, RightSourcing by Magnit

“2024 is the year we’re going to see practical potential unleashed with artificial intelligence on HCM processes, including enabling more sophisticated job-candidate matching beyond the algorithmic matching of today. We’ll also start to see deep learning being leveraged to analyze a candidate’s skills, experiences, and preferences, to not only materially generate better job matches but also potentially improve on-the-job performance. Meanwhile, I expect that predictive analytics will help on the client side by better forecasting labor market trends, allowing staffing firms to not only proactively align candidates with appropriate future opportunities, but also identify new talent pools and segments with increasing demand.”Colin Mooney, Chief Transformation Officer, Employbridge

“High5 anticipates a rising trend in organizations embracing direct sourcing platforms to engage talent directly, bypassing conventional recruitment methods and facilitating agile hiring processes. The emphasis will also shift more towards conversational vetting, which goes beyond conventional skills challenges. Moreover, in today’s landscape, connecting with passive candidates will have a heightened significance in 2024. We see technology, such as High5, playing a pivotal role in this scenario, enabling organizations to leverage digital tools for targeted outreach, personalized communication, and efficient talent relationship management.”Kara Kaplan, CEO, High5

“In 2023 we saw the first few raindrops of AI but I think that as we step into 2024, we should prepare for the downpour of impact, as AI, Machine Learning and Automation continue to transform our industry. These advances in technology mean that people will become increasingly free of admin burden, allowing us to focus on more of the strategic and relationship-based elements of our work.”  – Andrew Erlichman, VP, Sales/Channel Partner Strategy, Guidant Global

“In 2024, a significant shift, perhaps a ‘Great Rebalancing’, seems imminent within the contingent workforce sector. Large corporations will grapple with challenges in attracting top-tier talent due to the lingering impact from layoffs, return-to-office mandates, and weakened diversity initiatives. Astute companies will take note of the cost of reputational damage and rather than solely focusing on imposed resource constraints and rate reductions, forward-thinking companies will redirect their emphasis towards evaluating savings by prioritizing risk mitigation. Their focus will shift towards avoiding legal disputes or negative publicity, acknowledging the preservation of reputation holds substantial value in cost-saving measures. Meanwhile small and mid-sized firms, leveraging their nimbleness, will swiftly attract superior talent, driving business growth and opening the door for greater investment in innovation.  These entities will excel in integrating AI into workforce strategies, navigating M&A activities, and fostering inclusivity among the contingent workforce.  Service providers mirroring this agility are poised to revolutionize how buyers source and manage contingent workers, heralding a more balanced standard for human-centricity within workforce decisions. This evolution entails greater integration between all workers regardless of their classification and will drive a focus on discussing ‘total talent’ as a practical solution.”Cara Kresge, Chief Revenue Officer,

“While we are confident that AI will become more embedded in the recruiting process, we believe there will be more emphasis on how to do so in order to ensure there are fair, equitable and ethical outcomes. When it comes to recruiting, there is unconscious bias in how people make their hiring decisions. AI models can reinforce this bias, leaving candidates, like moms and women of color, at a disadvantage. It is important to design models to avoid assumptions and biases by excluding data such as historic hiring outcomes or gaps and potential exclusionary characteristics. Companies that take a more human-modeled approach whereby modeling is designed by what we learn from recruiters, for example, can reinforce tactics that produce more ethical results and decrease tactics that do not. We will continue to see a significant uptick in AI experimentation in the coming year, so the challenge for companies is to not only help minimize bias as we learn, but avoid excluding or overlooking qualified candidates, potentially missing out on highly qualified people who can provide great value to your company.”Jess Dominiczak, Chief Product Officer, The Mom Project

“2024 will be the year that talent professionals fully adopt and incorporate automation and artificial intelligence into their recruitment strategies. In 2023, we saw many staffing and recruiting professionals explore and discover how generative artificial intelligence such as ChatGPT can boost efficiency. However, to keep pace with the industry in 2024, firms will need automation and artificial intelligence to power their entire recruitment processes, from front end to back end. As a result, staffing and recruiting teams will be able to quickly hire top candidates, build strong talent pipelines, engage candidates more effectively, and generate more actionable data about their talent-acquisition and job-fulfillment efforts. Automation and artificial intelligence will no longer be nice-to-haves; they’ll be must-haves, especially as firms continue to navigate a fluid economy and an ongoing talent shortage.”Sameer Penakalapati, Founder and CEO, Ceipal

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