A New Mindset for Work
The rapid evolution and adoption of AI agents doesn’t just mean changes to the way we work, but also a profound shift in how we think about roles.
At Workday, we call this new way of thinking the chief work officer mindset. It's all about actively designing how work gets done across the company, because the very idea of what a job is keeps changing.
With AI agents, we can completely rethink entire processes and job functions. This means truly understanding every part of work—from the big-picture roles down to the tiny tasks in each job—and then smartly deciding where technology fits best.
This deeper understanding of work also pushes us to look at our design approach in a new light. Historically, with technology capabilities until this point, we focus on how people click and swipe, treating technology as just a tool. But with AI, organizations must think about relationship design.
Tammy Snow, vice president of research & data analytics at Workday, points out, "The most effective AI experiences treat technology not as a utility, but as a collaborative partner. This shift from transactional to relational design represents the greatest opportunity—and challenge—for design leaders today."
This idea of building relationships with AI follows some similar rules as human relationships: it's all about trust, understanding, and mutual benefit. For AI, this means designing with clear capabilities (so users know what AI can and can't do), predictable behavior (so users understand why AI makes certain choices), adaptive learning (where AI gets to know user preferences), and user control (so people always feel empowered, not bossed around).
The impact that AI will have on the way we work means we can't have leaders working in separate silos anymore. We need a deeply collaborative approach. No single leader can handle all the responsibility for bringing AI into the company successfully. Instead, executives need to work together across different departments to make sure their teams are ready for an AI-driven future.
For example, HR leaders must team up with IT to redefine roles and help employees trust AI. And finance leaders can bring vital insights on strategy and how AI can boost the company's financial health. A team effort is key to smoothly rolling out AI agents and making sure humans and machines work well together.
As AI agents become a core part of how we work, success will increasingly be about how people use these tools to achieve great outcomes. It's a shift from just finishing tasks to boosting our human ingenuity. Companies need to rethink job roles and design work in a way that truly unlocks purpose, not just makes us more productive.
Ultimately, the future of work with AI is one where human intent guides us to a more productive, ethical, and fulfilling world for everyone.