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AI is reshaping leadership roles for India’s CHROs

By PNN | Updated: January 24, 2026 11:20 IST

As AI transforms workplaces, India's CHROs rethink leadershipAhmedabad (Gujarat) [India], January 24:  As artificial intelligence rapidly reshapes the ...

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As AI transforms workplaces, India's CHROs rethink leadership

Ahmedabad (Gujarat) [India], January 24 As artificial intelligence rapidly reshapes the workplace, India's Chief Human Resources Officers are being pushed to rethink leadership, talent management and organisational structure. The shift is no longer about adopting new technologies, but about addressing deeper questions of relevance, trust and human judgement in an AI-accelerated world.

Senior HR leaders across industries are realising that while AI is transforming processes faster than roles can be redefined, the real challenge lies in managing the human response to this change. Fear of obsolescence, uncertainty around skills and anxiety about relevance are emerging as key barriers to effective transformation. CHROs are expected to act not just as custodians of talent, but as architects of organisational confidence.

At the centre of this evolving conversation is MICA – The School of Ideas, which has been engaging with senior HR leaders from organisations such as Deloitte, BCG, JSW Steel, Reliance, Castrol, Astral, Emcure, Atlassian and Suzuki R&D to examine how leadership must evolve in an AI-driven environment. These discussions point to a clear consensus that technology adoption without cultural readiness risks eroding trust and engagement.

Speaking on the changing nature of leadership, Dr. Nirja Sharma, Chief Talent & Strategy Officer at MICA, emphasised the limits of automation.

“AI can generate answers, but it cannot create meaning. The real leadership challenge today is not about adopting technology faster, but about helping people feel relevant, valued and capable in a world that feels increasingly uncertain,” she said.

Industry leaders echo this view, noting that AI transformation is as much a psychological shift as it is a structural one. As automation alters tasks and workflows, organisations are realising that skill gaps are often secondary to emotional and cultural concerns. Addressing these requires leaders who can balance data-driven decisions with empathy, intuition and ethical judgement.

Reflecting this shift, the role of the CHRO is expanding beyond traditional administrative and talent functions. HR leaders are increasingly expected to redesign work around tasks and capabilities rather than fixed job descriptions, while cultivating cultures where learning, questioning and adaptability are encouraged.

To support organisations in this transition, MICA has introduced its Capability–Task Ecology framework. The model helps organisations identify tasks that can be fully automated, arms that can be augmented by technology, and functions where human control must remain central to preserve judgement, creativity and cultural nuance.

Industry voices reinforce the importance of this approach. Leaders point out that future-ready organisations will be those that build employee confidence and trust alongside technical capability. In an era of constant disruption, leadership is increasingly defined not by having all the answers but by creating spaces where learning feels safe and uncertainty can be navigated collectively.

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