ð¨ BREAKING: Taiwan enacted its basic law on AI, which includes, among other innovative provisions, detailed AI governance principles and LABOR RIGHTS for humans who lose their jobs due to AI. Other countries should take note: According to the law's third article, the research and application of AI in Taiwan should adhere to the following principles (read them carefully!): 1. Sustainability: It should consider mental health, social equity, and environmental sustainability, reducing potential health risks or digital disparities, and enabling the public to adapt to the changes brought about by AI. 2. Human Autonomy: It should support human autonomy, respect fundamental human rights and cultural values such as the right to personality, allow for human oversight, and implement a people-centered approach that respects the rule of law, human rights, and democratic values. 3. Privacy Protection and Data Governance: It should respect the privacy and autonomy of personal data, adopt the principle of data minimization, and avoid the risk of data leakage. 4. Security: Cybersecurity measures should be established throughout the research and application of AI to prevent security threats and attacks, ensuring the robustness and security of the system. 5. Transparency and Explainability: AI outputs should be appropriately disclosed or labeled to facilitate risk assessment and understanding of their impact on relevant rights, thereby enhancing the trustworthiness of AI. 6. Fairness: AI research and application should avoid risks such as system bias and discrimination, and should not result in discrimination against specific groups. 7. Accountability: Traceability should be maintained, and different roles in AI research and application should bear corresponding responsibilities, including internal governance responsibilities and external social responsibilities. For those familiar with the EU AI Act, the way the principles above are framed is more direct and comprehensive than the European framework. As I wrote a few times before, the EU missed an opportunity to be more explicit and broad when protecting fundamental rights in the context of AI development and deployment (which could help set a stronger regulatory precedent). Another interesting provision is Article 12, focused on labor rights. It says that, in response to the development of AI, the government must address skill gaps and ensure workers' occupational safety, health, and labor rights, including providing employment assistance to those unemployed due to AI, based on their work abilities. To my knowledge, this is the first AI law that expressly foresees labor rights for those who lose their jobs due to AI. Well done, Taiwan! - ð To learn more about recent AI governance developments, join my newsletter's 90,000+ subscribers (below). ð To upskill and advance your career, join the 28th cohort of my AI Governance training in March (link below).
Future Of Work
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Some technologies donât just solve problems â they give people their independence back. I rediscovered Liftware, and I was genuinely moved by what it can do. It looks simple: a smart handle connected to everyday utensils. But inside, itâs a powerful piece of engineering designed for people with hand tremors (Parkinsonâs, essential tremor, and more). Hereâs how it works: ð¹ Sensors detect tiny hand movements in real time ð¹ Micro-motors instantly counteract the tremor ð¹ The spoon or fork stays stable â even if the hand doesnât The result? Up to 70% less shaking. And for many people, that means eating soup again⦠without help. This is technology at its best: invisible, intelligent, and deeply human. ð¡ My take Most people donât know this, but Liftware was developed by a small startup before being acquired by Googleâs life sciences division (now Verily). What makes it remarkable is the engineering challenge: the device doesnât try to stop the tremor â it predicts and cancels it. Itâs basically a tiny real-time AI system⦠hidden inside a spoon. This is the future I love: not just smarter devices, but more compassionate ones. If youâve seen other innovations that genuinely improve peopleâs lives, Iâd love to discover them. Whatâs one piece of tech-for-good that inspired you recently? #techforgood #innovation #technology #healthtech #accessibility #assistivetechnology #futureofhealth #inclusiveDesign #AI #impact
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Indiaâs green economy is growing fast but LinkedIn data suggests green talent is growing even faster. The LinkedIn Hiring Rate (LHR) for green talent â defined as professionals with green skills, green job titles, or both â is now 59.7% higher than for the overall workforce. This means green-skilled professionals are significantly more likely to be hired than their peers, underscoring the growing demand for sustainability-focused roles. âThe prioritisation of green talent by Indian companies is being fuelled by an interplay of policy reforms, rising consumer consciousness, and the need for deep business transformation,â says Neelima Burra, Chief Strategy, Transformation, and Marketing Officer at Luminous Power Technologies. âGovernment initiatives like the PM Suryaghar Yojna, National Solar Mission, and Smart City Mission, combined with the growing mandate for ESG reporting â are also pushing companies to recruit sustainability experts, carbon auditors, and ESG strategists to meet regulatory and investor expectations,â she adds further. Operational efficiency has emerged as the top skill across the top five industries increasingly hiring for green skills, as per LinkedIn data. In contrast, precision agriculture skills lead in farming, ranching, and forestry â highlighting how sector-specific green skills are evolving. âOperational efficiency offers the fastest route to tangible returns. It moves the conversation beyond regulatory compliance to net profitability, ensuring we can do more with less energy and fewer materials,â says Venu Nuguri Managing Director and CEO at Hitachi Energy. This surge in demand aligns with broader economic trends. Green jobs in India have grown over 10 times in the past five years, with Gen Z accounting for 63% of applicants, reports The Economic Times, citing a report by WeNaturalists. The projections are equally ambitious. Indiaâs green economy will generate 7.29 million jobs by FY28 and 35 million by 2047, as the sector scales toward a $1 trillion valuation by 2030 and $15 trillion by 2070, suggests another report by The Economic Times, citing a report by NLB Services. The message is clear: green skills arenât just good for the planet â theyâre becoming essential for employability. As India accelerates its climate and economic goals, the workforce is already adapting. The question now is whether education, training, and policy can keep pace. Read the full report here: https://lnkd.in/g873CzHT #COP30 #GreenerTogether Source: The Economic Times: https://lnkd.in/d-3bShQPÂ The Economic Times: https://lnkd.in/dSUMFS58Â
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As we transition from traditional task-based automation to ð®ððð¼ð»ð¼ðºð¼ðð ðð ð®ð´ð²ð»ðð, understanding ð©ð°ð¸ an agent cognitively processes its environment is no longer optional â it's strategic. This diagram distills the mental model that underpins every intelligent agent architecture â from LangGraph and CrewAI to RAG-based systems and autonomous multi-agent orchestration. The Workflow at a Glance 1. ð£ð²ð¿ð°ð²ð½ðð¶ð¼ð» â The agent observes its environment using sensors or inputs (text, APIs, context, tools). 2. ðð¿ð®ð¶ð» (ð¥ð²ð®ðð¼ð»ð¶ð»ð´ ðð»ð´ð¶ð»ð²) â It processes observations via a core LLM, enhanced with memory, planning, and retrieval components. 3. ðð°ðð¶ð¼ð» â It executes a task, invokes a tool, or responds â influencing the environment. 4. ðð²ð®ð¿ð»ð¶ð»ð´ (Implicit or Explicit) â Feedback is integrated to improve future decisions.    This feedback loop mirrors principles from: ⢠The ð¢ð¢ðð ð¹ð¼ð¼ð½ (ObserveâOrientâDecideâAct) ⢠ðð¼ð´ð»ð¶ðð¶ðð² ð®ð¿ð°ðµð¶ðð²ð°ððð¿ð²ð used in robotics and AI ⢠ðð¼ð®ð¹-ð°ð¼ð»ð±ð¶ðð¶ð¼ð»ð²ð± ð¿ð²ð®ðð¼ð»ð¶ð»ð´ in agent frameworks Most AI applications today are still âreactive.â But agentic AI â autonomous systems that operate continuously and adaptively â requires: ⢠A ð°ð¼ð´ð»ð¶ðð¶ðð² ð¹ð¼ð¼ð½ for decision-making ⢠Persistent ðºð²ðºð¼ð¿ð and contextual awareness ⢠Tool-use and reasoning across multiple steps ⢠ð£ð¹ð®ð»ð»ð¶ð»ð´ for dynamic goal completion ⢠The ability to ð¹ð²ð®ð¿ð» from experience and feedback   This model helps developers, researchers, and architects ð¿ð²ð®ðð¼ð» ð°ð¹ð²ð®ð¿ð¹ð ð®ð¯ð¼ðð ððµð²ð¿ð² ðð¼ ð²ðºð¯ð²ð± ð¶ð»ðð²ð¹ð¹ð¶ð´ð²ð»ð°ð² â and where things tend to break. Whether youâre building agentic workflows, orchestrating LLM-powered systems, or designing AI-native applications â I hope this framework adds value to your thinking. Letâs elevate the conversation around how AI systems ð³ð¦ð¢ð´ð°ð¯. Curious to hear how you're modeling cognition in your systems.
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A market map with 10,000 companies is impossible to prioritize. These are the 300 to know. I was a VP of Product in sales tech. And I was frustrated with the maps I found. So I've been studying the space and speaking with experts. Here's the players you need to know: â ONE - Core: Revenue Operating System This is your CRM, your system of record - where your sales operation begins. I break this into 3 segments: Enterprise Platforms â Built for large organizations with complex workflows and high-volume deals â Salesforce, Oracle, Microsoft Dynamics 365, SAP Growth-Stage Solutions â Designed for growing businesses that need scalable tools but with flexibility to adapt â HubSpot, Pipedrive, Zoho CRM, SugarCRM Modern CRMs â Startups and fast-scaling companies looking to move fast without rigid systems rely on modern CRMs. â Attio, Affinity, Close.io, Copper, Freshsales. â LAYER TWO - Engagement & Intelligence These tools power outbound outreach, automate sequences, and provide real-time data on prospects: â Outreach, Salesloft, VanillaSoft, Groove Engagement tools ensure your team hits the right prospect at the right time. â LAYER THREE - Revenue Acceleration These platforms shorten deal cycles: â Gong, Salesloft, Chorus.ai, Ebsta With real-time feedback and actionable insights... â LAYER FOUR - Data & Enrichment Your outreach is only as good as the data backing it. These platforms ensure youâre reaching out to right prospects. â ZoomInfo, Apollo.io, Clearbit, Lusha, Hunter io, Cognism â SATELLITE CLUSTERS - Modern GTM Stack These tools enhance parts of the GTM journey. AI-Enhanced Tools â Automate and personalize content creation at scale. â Writer, Grammarly, CopyAI, Jasper Product-Led Motion â Identify sales-ready leads through product engagement. â Pocus, Intercom, Breyta Sales Enablement â Equip sales teams with training, resources, and playbooks to perform at their best. â Seismic, Spekit, Allego Conversational GTM â Convert prospects directly through real-time chat. â Drift (now part of Salesloft) â SATELLITE CLUSTERS- Emerging Categories These are adjacent categories sales teams often still use. Product Analytics â Track user behaviors post-sale for better upsell and retention opportunities. â Amplitude, Mixpanel Customer Success â Ensure long-term customer retention and success beyond the initial sale. â Gainsight, Catalyst, Totango Workspace Integration â Enable seamless collaboration across sales and operations. â Notion, Slack, Airtable, monday.com Revenue Orchestration â Connect workflows across different systems to streamline revenue operations. â NektarAI, Tray.io, Workato, Boomi â This took a lot of time. Reshare â»ï¸ if you loved this post. What tools would you add?
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Remote teams donât work? Hereâs the truth: If your team needs constant watching... Youâve hired the wrong people. I've managed a remote team for 3+ years. Hereâs what Iâve learned: 1/ The best people donât need babysitting â They deliver results, not excuses. â Micromanagement kills trust. â Ownership drives real performance. â Accountability beats oversight. 2/ No commute means more growth â Extra hours for learning, not traffic. â Time spent on skills, not sitting still. â Work-life balance fuels productivity. â Efficiency replaces exhaustion. 3/ No office means no politics â Results matter more than appearances. â Ideas win, not egos. â Collaboration over competition. â Culture thrives without drama. Hereâs how you can make it work: â Set clear KPIs that actually matter. â Monitor outcomes, not hours. â Document your process with Tango. â Give freedom to work where, when, and how. â Focus on impactânot desk time. Remote success isnât about locationâitâs about results. I started using Tango myself to streamline our workflows, keeping everyone aligned. For our remote team, itâs a game-changer. Why? Less explaining, more doing. â»ï¸ Repost and follow Justin Bateh, PhD for more.
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There are always situations in which you need to communicate fast and clearly. Especially in a crisis, in new situations, or when there is time pressure. The STICC protocol helps you achieve this. The STICC Protocol was developed by psychologist Gary Klein as a tool for managing the unexpected. STICC stands for: Situation, Task, Intent, Concerns, Calibrate and is a technique for productive communication about what to do when you face a new, unexpected situation. This is what it means: S - Situation = Hereâs what I think we face. The leader summarizes how they see the situation, problem, or crisis at hand. T - Task = Hereâs what I think we should do. The leader explains their plan for addressing the situation, problem, or crisis at hand. I - Intent = Hereâs why I think this is what we should do. The leader explains the reasons why they think this is the best way of addressing the situation, problem, or crisis at hand. C - Concerns = Hereâs what we should keep our eyes on. The leader mentions possible downsides or future consequences of the solution suggested to be taken into account as well. C - Calibrate = Now talk to me and give me your views. The leader asks others in the team to give their feedback and viewpoints, and especially invites them to disagree and add. This technique helps you in managing pressured situations in three ways: First, once something unexpected happens, it helps to develop appropriate responses. The five steps are aimed at discussing with a team what to do in cases that are not familiar. Through its focus on concrete action, on gathering different viewpoints, and on speed, the STICC protocol is a quick way to take appropriate action in new situations. Second, in step 4 (Concerns), you open up the discussion for further uncertainties and other changes that may follow. In this way, you mentally prepare people that there will always remain uncertainties. This helps in developing a crisis-ready mindset that is not only helpful in the current crisis, but also in the next. Third, the fact that a constructive dialogue takes place also facilitates communication and mutual learning. Even though the leader brings the suggestions here, it is the team together that comes to a solution. And while doing that, they learn together and from each other in an open and adaptive way, which helps further prepare them for future crises. My advice: use STICC whenever you have to communicate fast and clearly. === Follow me or subscribe to my Soulful Strategy newsletter for more: https://lnkd.in/e_ytzAgU #communicationtips #agile #teamexercise
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Just out in Harvard Business Review, summary of the Hybrid Experiment results and lessons on how to make hybrid succeed. Experiment: randomize 1600 graduate employees in marketing, finance, accounting and engineering at Trip.com into 5-days a week in office, or 3-days a week in office and 2-days a week WFH. Analyzed 2 years of data. Two key results A) Hybrid and fully-in-office showed no differences in productivity, performance review grade, promotion, learning or innovation. B) Hybrid had a higher satisfaction rate, and 35% lower attrition. Quit-rate reductions were largest for female employees. Four managerial lessons 1) Hybrid needs a strong performance management system so managers donât need to hover over employees at their desks to check their progress. Trip.com had an extensive performance review process every six months. 2) Coordinate in-office days at the team or company level. Schedule clarity prevents the frustration of coming to an empty office only to participate in Zoom calls. Trip.com coordinated WFH on Wednesday and Friday. 3) Having leadership buy-in is critical (as with most management practices). Trip.comâs CEO and C-suite all support the hybrid policy. 4) A/B test new policies (as well as products) if possible. Often new policies turn out to be unexpectedly profitable. Trip.com made millions of dollars more profits from hybrid by cutting expensive turnover.
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A Return To Office mandate is a funny thing. A trade-off of lower workforce productivity, morale, retention, engagement, and trust in exchange for...managers feeling more in control. It's more a sign of insecurity and incompetence than sound decision-making. The fact that 80% of executives who have pushed for RTO mandates have later regretted their decision only makes the point further, and yet every few months more leaders line up to pad this statistic. In case your leaders have forgotten, return to office mandates are associated with: ð» 16% lower intent to stay among the highest-performing employees (Gartner) ð» 10% less trust, psychological safety, and relationship quality between workers and their managers (Great Place to Work) ð» 22% of employees from marginalized groups becoming more likely to search for new jobs (Greenhouse) ð» No significant change in financial performance while guaranteeing damage to employee satisfaction (Ding and Ma, 2024) The thing is, we KNOW how to do hybrid work well at this point. ð¯ Allow teams to decide on in-person expectations, and hold people accountable to itâhigh flexibility; high accountability. ð¯ Make in-person time unique and valuable, with brainstorming, events, and culture-building activitiesânot video calls all day in the office. ð¯ Value outcomes, not appearances, of productivityâreward those who get their work done regardless of where they do it. ð¯ Train inclusive managers, not micromanagersâbuild in them the skills and confidence to lead with trust rather than fear and insecurity. Leaders that fly in the face of all this data to insist that workers return to office "OR ELSE" communicate one thing: they are the kinds of leaders that place their own egos and comfort above their shareholders and employees alike. Faced with the very real test of how to design the hybrid workforce of the future, these leaders chose to throw a tantrum in their bid to return to the past, and their organizations will suffer for it. The leaders that will thrive in this time? Those that are willing to do the work. Those that are willing to listen to their workforce, skill up to meet new needs, and claim their rewards in the form of the best talent, higher productivity, and the highest level of worker loyalty and trust. Will that be you?
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Louder for the people at the back ð¤ Many organisations today seem to have shifted from being institutions that develop great talent to those that primarily seek ready-made talent. This trend overlooks the immense value of individuals who, despite lacking experience, possess a great attitude, commitment, and a team-oriented mindset. These qualities often outweigh the drawbacks of hiring experienced individuals with a fixed and toxic mindset. The best organisations attract talent with their best years ahead of them, focusing on potential rather than past achievements. Letâs be clear this is more about mindset and willingness to learn and unlearn as apposed to age. To realise the incredible potential return, organisations must commit to creating an environment where continuous development is possible. This requires a multi-faceted approach: 1. Robust Training Programmes: Employers should invest in comprehensive training programmes that equip employees with the necessary skills for their roles. This includes on-the-job training, mentorship programmes, online courses, and workshops. 2. Redefining Hiring Criteria: Organisations should revise their hiring criteria to focus more on candidatesâ potential and willingness to learn rather than solely on prior experience or formal qualifications. Behavioural interviews, aptitude tests, and probationary periods can help assess a candidate's ability to learn and adapt. 3. Partnerships with Educational Institutions: Companies can collaborate with educational institutions to design curricula that align with industry needs. Apprenticeship programmes, internships, and cooperative education can bridge the gap between academic learning and practical job skills. 4. Lifelong Learning Culture: Encouraging a culture of lifelong learning within organisations is crucial. Employers should provide ongoing education opportunities and support for professional development. This includes continuous skills assessment and access to resources for upskilling and reskilling. 5. Inclusive Recruitment Practices: Employers should implement inclusive recruitment practices that remove biases and barriers. Blind recruitment, diversity quotas, and targeted outreach programmes can help ensure that diverse candidates are given a fair chance. By implementing these measures, organisations can develop a workforce that is adaptable, innovative, and resilient, ensuring sustainable success and growth.