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Live Conference Recap BY Grace Turney | June 29, 2026

Future-Proofing HR in the Age of AI

Julia Johnson marked her second day on the job at Cognizant with a history lesson. As the company’s new SVP, global talent management leader, she reminded the room that IBM, which spent 115 years building one of the world’s most recognized brands, was once called Computing, Tabulating and Recording Company. The rebranding happened in 1924. The lesson? What we call things matters, and the names we give new technologies shape how we use them.“If we had a time machine,” Johnson said, “we would rename it augmented intelligence, because it really requires having a human complete it—not being a rubber stamp,” Johnson said during an executive panel discussion at From Day One’s Manhattan conference. Moderator Lydia Dishman, SVP of content strategy, narrative and thought leadership at Method Communications, opened by citing a striking data point: 88% of HR leaders say their organizations have not yet realized significant business value from AI tools, according to a recent survey. The question the panel had gathered to answer wasn’t whether AI would transform work, it’s already doing that, but how to move from experimentation to real transformation while keeping the human part of work intact.Job Elimination Is the Wrong FrameThe most persistent misconception about AI, panelists agreed, is the idea that it eliminates jobs wholesale.“AI is really, really good at doing certain tasks,” said Scott Turner, partner at Mercer, who previously built agentic AI systems at Disney. “A job is a whole stack of tasks. Replacing a job is a human decision. If all those tasks in a job can be easily replaced by AI, perhaps you didn’t design that great a job for the human in the first place.”Owen O’Neill, executive director of HR technology and operations at Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, pushed back on the broader pressure and market noise around AI: “Everybody needs to do what’s right for the culture and readiness of your organization, at the pace that works for you” he said.The flip side of that caution is not ignoring AI’s genuine implications. “What I cringe at is when people talk to their employees like, ‘Oh, this isn’t going to have an impact at all,’” Turner said. “That’s just disingenuous. It’s going to have an impact. Let’s try to do this thoughtfully.”Transformation Begins With the Right QuestionWhen organizations approach Mercer wanting to deploy AI in HR, Turner says the first question he asks is deceptively simple: What are you trying to improve? That question is the antidote to FOMO-driven adoption—the tendency to implement AI because competitors are doing it, or because a vendor has a compelling pitch. The most successful AI transformations he’s seen share a common trait: they identify specific, high-frequency workflows, redesign them around what AI does well, measure the results against clear KPIs, and keep humans meaningfully in the loop.Johnson echoed this, pointing to one of IBM’s earliest high-impact use cases. Employment verification letters, the kind a senior manager needs urgently when closing on a home, used to require up to two days of back-and-forth. Now they’re generated in any country, in about 30 seconds, around the clock, which made a significant difference for employees. “Be pragmatic, have the use case, look at the ROI, embrace what will be used,” she said about the experience in her former role. O’Neill put it plainly: “Tell me what your HR priorities are and what your strategy is, and I will tell you what our AI roadmap is to enable that. Start with what those priorities are, not the technology.”Panelists shared their perspectives and best practices on the topic, "Future-Proofing HR With AI: How to Lead, Adapt, and Keep the Human Touch in a Tech-Driven Era"Efficiency gains are real, but panelists were candid about areas where the business case doesn’t always hold up under scrutiny.Resume screening is one. O’Neill noted that Regeneron could received 1000’s of applications for a single role, making AI-assisted screening appear essential. But he was quick to identify the risk: “How we’ve hired in the past doesn’t necessarily reflect how we want to hire in the future. A good hire two years ago is not necessarily a good hire two years from now.”Performance management is another. AI can remove some bias, consolidate feedback, and save managers time, but, O’Neill says, that misses an important point. “Performance management can be seen as a social contract between an employee and a manager. Automating that risks dehumanizing it. It’s about the conversation, not the document.”The Talent Pipeline Problem No One Is SolvingDishman raised a concern that has received less attention than job elimination at the entry level: what happens to the pipeline that feeds middle management when the entry-level roles that have historically developed that talent disappear?Paul Tiesler, SVP of talent development and learning strategy at Moody’s Corporation, offered a structural answer. The traditional pyramid-shaped org chart, he says, may need to become an hourglass. Under that model, entry-level employees sit alongside AI, learning from it and compressing their career timelines. Middle managers are elevated into more senior-level thinking as AI handles the processes that currently bog them down. The people organizations hire at both levels share a trait: strong judgment, discernment, and critical thinking, skills AI cannot replicate.“You’re going to be hiring for exactly the same thing,” Tiesler said, “more so than technical skills, especially as AI is able to automate some of those technical skills.” Moody’s has already seen this play out within software and product development. “We sat down with them and said, ‘How can we make AI do this better for you,’” Tiesler said of its middle managers, “and they’ve been able to elevate their role, and juniors on their team are now getting to do more interesting work.”Putting the Human In the Loop—IntentionallyBill Beegle, senior global business solutions architect at Degreed, offered a different model for how AI can augment rather than automate: scenario-based role play. Degreed uses AI to help employees practice high-stakes conversations, difficult performance reviews, sensitive feedback, the transition from peer to manager, in a low-risk environment where they can make mistakes and receive structured feedback.“Unlike automating a process, this is putting it like a flight simulator,” Beegle said. “You get to try, you get to practice, you can make as many mistakes as you want. You’re not really going to crash a plane, you’re just talking to AI.”The use case has found particular traction in regulated industries like biopharma, where the wrong word in a conversation with a physician carries real consequences. And it represents something the panel returned to repeatedly: using AI not to remove the human, but to make the human better at the distinctly human parts of their job.Johnson crystallized the logic: “What are humans no good at? Finding needles in haystacks. What does LLM do really well? They find needles in haystacks, or find trends. Look at what the human is good at and amplify that.”Building Trust in Times of ChangeThe panel converged on change management as the most underrated element of AI adoption. Tiesler was direct about what doesn't work: “Edicts from down on high don’t work. Arbitrary ‘we’ve got to cut X percentage of headcount, we have to automate Y number of processes’ – that doesn’t really work.”What does work, panelists agreed, is co-creation with employees – sitting down with business teams, mapping their actual processes, and identifying genuine opportunities for relief. Transparency matters too. Johnson described the framework she used at IBM: “We’re going to tell you what we are doing, why we are doing it, when we’re doing it, and how it will impact you. It’s not hard, but it’s so often overlooked.”Beegle pointed to one practical lever organizations underuse: making skills transparent. When employees can see how their skills map to other internal roles and what would help them get there, the internal mobility conversation stops being abstract. “It’s a really important part, so people understand that it can benefit them.”Closing the session, Dishman asked the panel directly: can leading with AI and keeping the human touch actually coexist? Every panelist said yes, with conditions.Turner returned to the limits of what AI can actually do. Its model of truth is built entirely on language. “It has no concept that this is actually a chair and I’m touching it.” That gap between what AI can know and what humans embody through experience is permanent, and it’s where design comes in. “We are going to have a completely different set of knowledge than the LLM can ever have,” Turner said. “It’s about trying to find that balance of where it can be applied safely.”O’Neill said on a closing note: “We’re at step zero of a race that is going to go a million miles. We’re right at the beginning.”Grace Turney is a St. Louis-based writer, artist, and former librarian. See more of her work at graceturney17.wixsite.com/mysite.(Photos by Josh Larson for From Day One)

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Feature BY Erin Behrens | June 09, 2026

Meet the AI Natives Who Don’t Want to Be

Just because they’re good at it, doesn’t mean they like it. Growing up with algorithmic feeds and AI-generated content, Gen Z is one of the most AI-fluent generations, but increasingly, they’re the most skeptical of it. It’s a paradox playing out in the workplace, on social media, and even on the stages of this year’s commencement ceremonies, where VIP-speaker references to the promise of AI were met with choruses of boos.Many employers have assumed that because Gen Z grew up alongside these tools, they’re both comfortable and confident using them in professional settings. But the reality is far more complicated, and to understand how Gen Z is actually navigating this moment, From Day One went straight to the source.A Label That Might Not FitFirst, the roots of the label. An AI native “refers to something—usually a product, company or workflow—that was designed from the ground up with AI as a core component, not bolted on later as a mere feature,” according to an IBM explainer. In some cases, Gen Z has been given this title simply due to the timeline of AI’s emergence in the workforce and education. Having been early adopters in terms of their age, they’re generally not getting into a deeper commitment. According to a Gallup poll, “Gen Z’s use of generative AI in everyday life has been largely stable since March 2025. About half (51%) of 14 to 29 year olds continue to say they use AI either daily (22%) or weekly (29%), while 11% report using it monthly, 20% every few months, and 19% say they never use it.” But use doesn’t necessarily equate to trust or excitement. “In most of these cases, Gen Z-ers have become increasingly skeptical, increasingly negative—from a place where even last year, they weren’t particularly positive about it,” Zach Hrynowski, a senior education researcher for Gallup, told the New York Times.Rocki Rockingham, chief HR officer at GE Appliances, notices that younger employees aren’t more trusting of AI than their older counterparts, but on the other hand, they are “more willing to take chances. To try new things, to do things differently,” she said at From Day One’s Miami conference. It’s a distinction worth making at a time when Gen Z’s feelings about the new technology grow more complicated. The Pipeline ProblemRecruiters and hiring managers are increasingly flagging AI fluency as a core qualification in the workforce. It’s no longer a differentiator, but table stakes. An ominous new corporate cliché has even been propagated: AI won’t take your job, but someone who knows how to use it will. Postings that once listed tools like Google Suite and Canva are now leading with ChatGPT and prompt engineering. The message to Gen Z candidates is clear: you were born into this, so you should know it.The expectation of AI fluency creates uneven ground for those early in their careers who may not have hands-on experience with the technology, widening the gap between candidates before they’ve even had a chance to compete. Dani Monaghan, the SVP of global talent enablement at Expedia Group, worries about the access. “If you’re not taught AI at school or in university, and you don’t have the means to access technology, I think the gap is bigger than it will ever be before,” she said at From Day One’s Seattle conference. It’s a gap that’s leaving members of Gen Z increasingly wary. One member of Gen Z, Alec Gautier, a graduate of Marist University’s class of 2023 and now a retention specialist at Saatva, says his attitude toward AI “is one of skepticism.” At root is his distrust of its creators. “I am not inherently opposed to the idea of generative AI, but its current architects and proprietors have, to put it lightly, dubious motives,” he said. This skepticism seems to be a trend, with 14% of Gen Z reporting a decline in excitement in AI since 2025, and 48% believing the risks in the workforce outweigh the benefits, according to Gallup data. Even if Gen Z realizes that AI will have to be part of their working lives, they don’t like the side effects and don’t want to wear the label.Their Role in Leading AI ResistanceWhile Gen Z is being cast as the face of AI prodigy in the workplace, they are also the ones leading the resistance against it, or at least, being the loudest about their unease with it. At graduation ceremonies this spring across the U.S., many graduates hooted at distinguished commencement speakers who spoke of AI, including former Google CEO Eric Schmidt at the University of Arizona. He acknowledged that graduates feared “that the future has already been written, that the machines are coming, that the jobs are evaporating, that the climate is breaking, that politics are fractured, and that you are inheriting a mess that you did not create.” But he told them, essentially, that if they don’t like it, they should just fix it. Alvarado, records management specialist at the Jefferson County Clerk's Office in Watertown, NY, shared her thoughts on the AI boom (photo courtesy of Alvarado)Indeed, students, new graduates, and those early in their careers are experiencing existential concerns about AI’s ethics and its impact on their life and work. They worry about how it affects our ability to connect and be creative, and also the mere amount of “slop” being brought into the world. “AI is just being used way too commonly across all fields, including art, music, fashion, writing, anything that takes a little bit of creativity or brainpower,” Hailey Alvarado, a St. Lawrence University class of 2022 alumna, told From Day One. “When we have an automated intelligence that is programmed to affirm everything we say to it, there is no actual intelligence. It’s just a robot designed to agree with us,” she said.Gen Z also worries about their ability to find early-career roles at a time when entry-level jobs are being stripped away. “Companies are citing A.I. as the reason for mass layoffs; according to the Alliance for Secure A.I., there have been almost 120,000 A.I.-linked job losses in the United States just since last year. Recent college graduates are facing a brutal job market as entry-level positions disappear and A.I. renders the application process inhumanly opaque,” according to the New York Times. And those fortunate enough to get jobs may be arriving just in time to find that “AI is unraveling the social fabric of work,” as Aki Ito, chief correspondent at Business Insider, reported last month. Perhaps most importantly, the generation fears the technology’s environmental impact as its ubiquitous data centers gobble up resources and spew pollution. Having grown up in a world marked by environmental disasters and an escalating climate crisis, Gen Z has long been associated with sustainability activism, and their skepticism of AI is no exception. “While I do have some personal and professional concerns about AI, they are wholly secondary compared to my environmental concerns about the technology,” said Gautier. “The environmental implications of AI I find deeply troubling. The proliferation of data centers and the damage they’ve already done to local ecosystems, public spaces, and fresh-water sources in vulnerable communities is extremely distressing,” he said. The Future of Connection, Creativity, and WorkNo generation can be reduced to a single trait or defining point, but when a crowd of graduates erupts in unanimous boos when their supposed role models mention AI, it’s hard to dismiss it as anything other than a distress signal. Whether it’s a trend, a backlash, or something more lasting, one thing is clear: Gen Z’s relationship with AI is far more portentous than the “AI native” label suggests.The frustration for many isn’t just about the technology itself, but also about what gets lost when we rush to adopt it. Said Alvarado: “We need more true, genuine connections, more creative expression, more critical thinking. Not less. Not from a robot.”Erin Behrens is an associate editor at From Day One.(Featured photo by PeopleImages/iStock)

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What Our Attendees are Saying

Jordan Baker(Attendee) profile picture

“The panels were phenomenal. The breakout sessions were incredibly insightful. I got the opportunity to speak with countless HR leaders who are dedicated to improving people’s lives. I walked away feeling excited about my own future in the business world, knowing that many of today’s people leaders are striving for a more diverse, engaged, and inclusive workforce.”

– Jordan Baker, Emplify
Desiree Booker(Attendee) profile picture

“Thank you, From Day One, for such an important conversation on diversity and inclusion, employee engagement and social impact.”

– Desiree Booker, ColorVizion Lab
Kim Vu(Attendee) profile picture

“Timely and much needed convo about the importance of removing the stigma and providing accessible mental health resources for all employees.”

– Kim Vu, Remitly
Florangela Davila(Attendee) profile picture

“Great discussion about leadership, accountability, transparency and equity. Thanks for having me, From Day One.”

– Florangela Davila, KNKX 88.5 FM
Cory Hewett(Attendee) profile picture

“De-stigmatizing mental health illnesses, engaging stakeholders, arriving at mutually defined definitions for equity, and preventing burnout—these are important topics that I’m delighted are being discussed at the From Day One conference.”

– Cory Hewett, Gimme Vending Inc.
Trisha Stezzi(Attendee) profile picture

“Thank you for bringing speakers and influencers into one space so we can all continue our work scaling up the impact we make in our organizations and in the world!”

– Trisha Stezzi, Significance LLC
Vivian Greentree(Attendee) profile picture

“From Day One provided a full day of phenomenal learning opportunities and best practices in creating & nurturing corporate values while building purposeful relationships with employees, clients, & communities.”

– Vivian Greentree, Fiserv
Chip Maxwell(Attendee) profile picture

“We always enjoy and are impressed by your events, and this was no exception.”

– Chip Maxwell, Emplify
Katy Romero(Attendee) profile picture

“We really enjoyed the event yesterday— such an engaged group of attendees and the content was excellent. I'm feeling great about our decision to partner with FD1 this year.”

– Katy Romero, One Medical
Kayleen Perkins(Attendee) profile picture

“The From Day One Conference in Seattle was filled with people who want to make a positive impact in their company, and build an inclusive culture around diversity and inclusion. Thank you to all the panelists and speakers for sharing their expertise and insights. I'm looking forward to next year's event!”

– Kayleen Perkins, Seattle Children's
Michaela Ayers(Attendee) profile picture

“I had the pleasure of attending From Day One. My favorite session, Getting Bias Out of Our Systems, was such a powerful conversation between local thought leaders.”

– Michaela Ayers, Nourish Events
Sarah J. Rodehorst(Attendee) profile picture

“Inspiring speakers and powerful conversations. Loved meeting so many talented people driving change in their organizations. Thank you From Day One! I look forward to next year’s event!”

– Sarah J. Rodehorst, ePerkz
Angela Prater(Attendee) profile picture

“I had the distinct pleasure of attending From Day One Seattle. The Getting Bias Out of Our Systems discussion was inspirational and eye-opening.”

– Angela Prater, Confluence Health
Joel Stupka(Attendee) profile picture

“From Day One did an amazing job of providing an exceptional experience for both the attendees and vendors. I mean, we had whale sharks and giant manta rays gracefully swimming by on the other side of the hall from our booth!”

– Joel Stupka, SkillCycle
Alexis Hauk(Attendee) profile picture

“Last week I had the honor of moderating a panel on healthy work environments at the From Day One conference in Atlanta. I was so inspired by what these experts had to say about the timely and important topics of mental health in the workplace and the value of nurturing a culture of psychological safety.”

– Alexis Hauk, Emory University