Key takeaway
Building an AI-powered workforce is a leadership and design challenge before it is a technology challenge.
This course is designed to help CHROs and CIOs build an AI-powered workforce by redesigning work at the task level, aligning AI investment with workforce readiness and business outcomes.
AI is already reshaping how work is performed and how decisions are made across the enterprise. Yet many organizations are applying AI on top of outdated foundations:
The technology has moved forward. Models of work have not.
This gap creates misalignment between AI investment, workforce readiness, and business outcomes. Closing it requires deliberate leadership decisions about:
This course addresses those decisions, step by step.
AI operates on tasks. Understanding this is the foundation of every effective AI workforce strategy.
People have skills.
Jobs have tasks.
Tasks require skills.
AI intervenes at the task layer.
This distinction matters because organizations that plan AI around job titles, org charts, or role counts miss where change actually occurs. Without task-level visibility:
Task-level visibility provides the grounding needed to align AI capability with real work. It is the conceptual foundation for the rest of this course.
Enterprises struggle with AI not because of model performance, but because their workforce foundations were not designed for continuous change.
Common blockers include:
These are not tooling issues. They are organizational design and leadership challenges that sit at the intersection of HR and technology.
Traditional job-based workforce models cannot keep pace with AI-driven change. HR must now help architect how work evolves.
Job-based models were designed for consistency and control. They struggle when:
HR’s role now extends into workforce architecture, including:
Reejig’s Work Ontology™ supports this shift by mapping work across jobs, tasks, and skills. It provides a shared, enterprise view of how work is performed today and how it is likely to evolve.
This enables AI deployment, workforce planning, and reskilling to move together.
AI-driven change succeeds or fails based on how it is led.
Bold leadership questions legacy processes and acts decisively. Responsible leadership ensures transparency, fairness, and sustained workforce support.
Effective AI-powered transformation:
Organizations that overlook workforce impact struggle to maintain trust, adoption, and momentum.
AI workforce transformation spans technology, operations, and people. No function can succeed in isolation.
Durable results depend on shared clarity around:
This alignment is the through-line of every module in this course.
Before deploying AI, leaders must understand how work actually gets done.
This module establishes three foundations:
The next modules build on these foundations with practical methods and frameworks.
This module is part of the Building the AI-Powered Workforce executive course.
👉 Download the Module 1 slide deck and course overview to:
Module 2: Making Work Visible. How to Map Tasks, Skills, and AI Impact
In the next module, you will learn:
👉 Read or watch Module 2 to continue the course