Labor
Ideas and insights about labor from MIT Sloan.
How to lead tech professionals and teams
By
Keeping your technology workforce operating at peak performance is critical to digital business success. Here’s how to motivate and manage tech workers.
These human capabilities complement AI’s shortcomings
By
The work tasks that AI is least likely to replace are those that depend on uniquely human capacities, such as empathy, judgment, ethics, and hope.
Workers need good jobs. The climate sector can help
By
The U.S. is experiencing a crisis around job quality. Emerging climate jobs can give workers a living wage, health care, and safe working conditions.
5 issues to consider as AI reshapes work
By
Experts say those making decisions about AI should engage proactively with policymakers and consider worker voice and well-being.
How to use generative AI to augment your workforce
By
Artificial intelligence can be useful in the workplace, but humans have to first define what success looks like, according to MIT Sloan’s Danielle Li.
FMLA may be weak, but it does help women advance in the workforce
By
Researchers studied the effects the Family and Medical Leave Act had after its passage in 1993. Here’s where it drove change.
How AI-empowered ‘citizen developers’ drive digital transformation
By
A new book explains how organizations are tapping AI-savvy front-line employees to create applications, mobile apps, automated workflows, and data analyses.
The rise of the union-curious worker, and how to win them over
By
In the U.S., front-line workers’ attitudes toward unions are softening, especially among people under 30. Here’s what they want from their workplaces.
Insights from MIT’s newest Nobel laureates on AI, labor, and more
By
Institute professor Daron Acemoglu and MIT Sloan professor Simon Johnson have examined economic growth, digital advertising, and the Russian oil cap.
The secret to successful AI implementations? Worker voice
By
When stakeholders become more involved in generative AI design and implementation, it’s more likely that such tools will augment work rather than displace workers.