28 Feb 2026
The conversation about HR and AI is getting louder.
And in many cases, it’s getting oversimplified.
We’re being told HR needs to “learn AI” or risk being left behind. But that framing misses something important.
The future HR skill gap isn’t purely technical.
It’s hybrid.
The Data Is Clear - But It’s Not What You Think.
LinkedIn’s latest Labour Market data shows roles requiring AI literacy have grown roughly 70% year-on-year.
That number gets attention quickly.
But when you look at the fastest-growing skills, they’re not just coding or prompt engineering.
They include:
AI literacy
Adaptability
Conflict mitigation
Process optimisation
Innovative thinking
That isn’t a tech profile.
That’s a hybrid profile.
And this is where HR sits.
The Risk for HR
Here’s the part that should make HR pause:
Only around 1% of HR professionals list AI skills on LinkedIn.
At the same time, HR is being asked to:
Lead AI change programs
Redesign roles impacted by automation
Re-skill and upskill workforces
Navigate productivity pressure from boards and executives
Manage employee anxiety around job security
That’s a significant expectation gap.
HR is expected to shape AI adoption, while many in the function haven’t yet built literacy around it.
This isn’t about becoming technical experts.
But it is about credibility.
AI Literacy for HR Is Not About Engineering
HR does not need to become engineers.
But we do need to understand:
What AI can realistically do
What it can’t do
Where it adds value
Where it introduces risk
How it changes capability frameworks
How it impacts role design and workforce planning
If HR cannot confidently sit in conversations about AI-enabled transformation, someone else will fill that space.
Why Hybrid Is the Real Advantage
The HR professionals who will thrive in the next five years won’t be the most technical.
They’ll be the ones who combine:
Commercial awareness Change leadership Data literacy Process thinking Human judgement AI literacy
That combination is rare.
And rare equals valuable.
Because AI implementation without people insight creates resistance.
And people insight without AI understanding creates irrelevance.
Hybrid capability is the bridge.
The Shift Happening Beneath the Surface
We’re already seeing subtle shifts in hiring briefs:
More demand for HR professionals who can:
Interpret workforce data
Challenge outdated processes
Think in systems
Partner with tech and transformation teams
Influence leaders through ambiguity
The HR Business Partner of 2020 is not the same brief as the HR Business Partner of 2030.
What This Means Practically
If you’re in HR today, this doesn’t mean panic-learning Python.
It means:
Start experimenting with AI tools in your workflow.
Understand how automation could impact your organisation’s roles.
Build fluency in workforce data conversations.
Get comfortable questioning process inefficiencies.
Stay curious about how work itself is changing.
The goal is to become strategically bilingual.
Fluent in people. Fluent in systems. Comfortable in both rooms.
Final Thought
AI is not replacing HR.
But HR professionals who ignore AI literacy may find the market moves faster than expected.
The skill gap isn’t technical.
It’s hybrid.
And the earlier you lean into that, the stronger your positioning will be.
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