Chike Aguh on government innovation in workforce development

Chike Aguh on government innovation in workfo...

Up next

Bank of America's Josh Bronstein on hiring for the long-term

The bank's head of global talent, an HBS grad, explains the value of cultivating careers, keeping churn low, hiring from within, and focusing on local markets and communities. Also, AI adoption, skills-based hiring, the pivotal role of managers, and training leaders to navigate t ...  Show more

HBS Project on Managing the Future of Work 2025 Year in Review, 2026 Preview

Managing the Future of Work co-chairs and podcast co-hosts, Joe Fuller and Bill Kerr, share highlights and insights from 2025 and look ahead to 2026. Top podcasts, research, trends, and a forthcoming book on managing the future of work. 

Recommended Episodes

How Companies Can Adapt to More Government Intervention
HBR IdeaCast

After decades of industrial policy that favored globalization and free trade, we are entering a new era. Prompted by the pandemic, climate change, rising geopolitical tensions and economic concerns, countries and groups of countries are once again using the power they have to int ...  Show more

AI and the American Worker with Acting U.S. Labor Secretary Julie Su
The Keynote by CNBC Events

The growth of AI across various industries has changed the labor landscape across the globe. Fears that the technology could replace American workers has prompted President Biden to issue an Executive Order on Safe, Secure and Trustworthy Artificial Intelligence. Acting Labor ...

  Show more

Unionising the US workforce
Business Daily

There has been a surge in the number of workplaces in the United States voting to join a labour union. Amid this wave of unionisation, companies are pushing back hard. We find out what is happening in the US and how businesses and politicians are reacting.We hear from a worker at ...  Show more

As India unlocks, how will it protect its workers’ rights?
WorklifeIndia

India is gradually unlocking its economy after more than two months of shutdown to contain the coronavirus outbreak, but many businesses and factories are facing a shortage of labour. That’s because when the factories closed down, millions of migrant workers, left to fend for the ...  Show more