PLAY PODCASTS
Will AI eliminate jobs? Hear what best-selling author, futurist, and popular TEDx speaker Mark McCrindle says the data reveals.
Season 3 · Episode 21

Will AI eliminate jobs? Hear what best-selling author, futurist, and popular TEDx speaker Mark McCrindle says the data reveals.

AI and the Future of Work: Artificial Intelligence in the Workplace, Business, Ethics, HR, and IT for AI Enthusiasts, Leaders · Mark McCrindle

June 12, 202338m 59s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (buzzsprout.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

Send us Fan Mail

We often discuss the technology that is automating the future of work. We perhaps don’t spend enough time talking about the human element - what it’s like being an employee whose career may be at risk or whose employer may not share her values. The future of work is about employers embracing the humanness of every employee and creating safe places. 

Mark McCrindle is a best-selling author, futurist, demographer, and popular TEDx speaker who is regarded as one of Australia’s foremost social researchers. He works with senior leaders to help them devise strategies for making their products and services future-proof. He’s also the host of The Future Report, a podcast featuring the themes of his social research.

Listen and learn...

  1. How work culture directly impacts employee productivity
  2. How to measure the quality of employee experiences
  3. How the mining industry attracts and retains workers... and how AI may replace traditional roles
  4. Should humans feel threatened by AI?
  5. Mark's advice to young leaders
  6. Why Mark says "we're made for work"... but that doesn't necessarily require an exchange of time for money
  7. How human relationships with machines will always be different than human relationships with each other
  8. Why the culture in Sydney is uniquely favorable for entrepreneurs

References in this episode...

Topics

cultureremote workautomationjob eliminationhuman-machine interactionworkspace redesignsocial researchdemographicsSydney