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Eduardo García Garzón: AI should enhance the human touch – not replace it

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Regardless of industry or seniority, the fear of being replaced by AI at work is palpable: 51% of UK business leaders plan to redirect investment from staff to AI. This discomfiting reality is undermining HR AI initiatives before they leave the ground: employees won’t rejoice in being managed by the same tech that might make their roles redundant.

High-level conversations that only focus on efficiency and cost-savings have poisoned AI for many – but businesses have a chance to flip the script. AI has the potential to transform ways of working to benefit staff: simplified workflows, reduced cognitive load, and accelerated results. And HR can lead by example.

Scaling HR oversight

AI is at its most useful in HR when it’s enabling, not replacing, human decision-making.

For example, rather than automating human interaction, HRs can adopt tools that surface trends across teams, summarise performance feedback, and anticipate issues before they escalate. But these systems can’t interpret personal context or navigate sensitive conversations. That requires judgement, discretion, and emotional intelligence, and that comes from the professionals.

When AI is confined to what it does best, which is processing large volumes of information, identifying patterns, and reducing manual admin. Rather than a replacement, it becomes an amplifier. It gives HR leaders the bandwidth to focus on strategic questions. Which teams are under pressure and why? Where are our wellbeing blind spots? Are our employees being fairly recognised?

HR’s responses to these issues can be greatly informed by AI’s data-driven insights, but only if human teams act on its recommendations with care and attention to detail.

Centring employee experience

The question is not whether AI belongs in HR – it’s how we do it right. HR teams are uniquely positioned to demonstrate how AI collaboration, rather than replacement, gets you the best of both worlds.

HR has been under strain in the UK, as teams grapple with talent shortages and rising expectations to deliver quicker results with fewer resources. AI can change this, especially for hiring and performance management processes, by making time and space for HRs to focus on the human dimensions of the job: supporting employees’ individual growth journeys, nurturing office culture, and building trust.

Streamlining lengthy admin jobs, like payroll processing and record maintenance, is a good start, with the reassurance that human teams are on-hand to deal with any discrepancies. This would give HR teams more availability to proactively support employees, such as conducting one-on-one catch-ups to collect feedback and more regularly assess wellbeing and performance. Consistent HR presence is a reassurance by itself.

Promoting smarter, considerate recruitment

AI benefits can extend to every prospective employee entering the hiring process. AI skill verification and even voice calls, for example, can make interviews simpler and more approachable for candidates – if done correctly. Naturally, human oversight is crucial for hiring, but AI can handle the basics so that HRs can focus on the all-important final stage interview.

Job interviews are stressful, and long wait times even more so, but AI can speed up the process by allowing candidates to self-serve in the initial interview stages. Many companies already do this by sending candidates questions to be answered in pre-recorded videos; an AI agent could take this further by conducting first-stage interviews in real time and posing reactive questions. HRs can then screen candidates in a fraction of the time while still maintaining full visibility, so they can focus on making a good first impression and gaining greater insights to inform the recruitment process.

Speeding up time-to-hire is a win-win for candidates and businesses… but only if the process remains transparent, inclusive and human-led where it counts.

Strengthening company culture

AI can offer HR leaders a clearer view of their organisation, indicating early signals of stress, disengagement or imbalance that might otherwise go unnoticed. But insight alone isn’t enough – what defines a strong culture is how leaders choose to respond. When AI is deployed transparently, without blocking human interaction, it can help build workplaces where support comes early, conversations happen often, and accountability is shared.

That’s the real opportunity that businesses are at risk of missing: to reinforce a culture where people feel seen.

Product AI Lead at  | egg@shakers.co.uk

Eduardo is Product AI Lead at Shakers, spearheading AI projects that focus on building valuable and ethical products. With a background in AI development and team management, he bridges technical depth with strategic vision.

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