The engagement trap: Becoming irreplaceable in the age of AI
The future of work isn’t waiting for better workplaces. It’s waiting for better contributors, writes Grant Wyatt.
tech
The future of work isn’t waiting for better workplaces. It’s waiting for better contributors, writes Grant Wyatt.
Seventy-three per cent of employees said technology has replaced work that was part of their job five years ago.
A Gold Coast dental technician with over 30 years of service has been found to have made inappropriate physical contact ...
Every business leader knows that human capital is the most critical part of their success or failure. In the age of AI, ...
As it turns out, when machines take over the drudgery, humans can reclaim the purpose, writes Narain Viswanathan.
Google has admitted to anti-competitive search agreements in Australia and has agreed with the ACCC that it should pay a ...
Designing an effective GenAI learning program is a strategic imperative for organisational leaders in the era of ...
The Productivity Commission’s recent AI report has stirred the industrial relations pot ahead of the Economic Reform ...
The ACTU has come out swinging with a new AI enforcement proposal just weeks from the government’s productivity ...
Commonwealth Bank is now the latest Australian company set to carry out job cuts, fuelled by an increase in AI ...
The government must focus on providing increased support to struggling small businesses, enabling them to invest, ...
Australia has all the ingredients to become a global leader in digital innovation, but only if we tackle the widening ...