Human Resources (HR) stories
On International Women's Day, women are urged to own ambition, redefine leadership and demand workplaces that adapt, not the other way round.
Tech leaders use International Women's Day to demand structural change, real equity and female power in shaping AI and senior decisions.
Women say the future of work must prioritise flexibility, parental support, pay equity, health policies and real power in decisions.
From anonymised hiring to visible female leaders, tech must turn equality intent into daily action to sustain momentum for women.
In a fractured world, leaders must “give to gain” by investing in cultural intelligence, turning diversity into real inclusion and resilience.
On International Women's Day, organisations are urged to expand access, invest in mentorship and redefine leadership for true equity.
Female leaders at Chaos share lessons on empathy, ambition and resilience, redefining what successful tech leadership looks like today.
Industrial engineer-turned-COO Stephanie Davis Neill explains how an operator mindset shapes adaptable, people-centred tech leadership.
New UK gender pay and menopause plans hailed, but leaders warn only deeper shifts in hiring, culture and progression will close gaps.
Women are entering tech in greater numbers, but real power lies in shaping revenue, strategy and growth, not just filling headcount targets.
Bridging schools and tech careers with inclusive training and language could speed women's path into engineering and shape fairer AI.
AI is exposing the invisible emotional labour taxing women leaders, turning unmeasured mental load into hard data companies can't ignore.
Vistra and G-P unveil a single-contract route to shift firms smoothly from EOR hiring to fully fledged entities in overseas markets.
Tech's gender gap won't close with quotas alone; real change depends on everyday culture, practical allyship and genuine sponsorship.
As AI reshapes work and life, women must be empowered to build and question it, or risk being defined by systems they did not design.
PeopleIN snaps up New Zealand workforce group Infrawork in a NZD $56 million deal, boosting its trans-Tasman and migrant-labour reach.
On International Women's Day, leaders urge AI built with ethics, inclusion and skills at its core to avoid deepening gender inequality.
Australian workers fear an AI “skills cliff” as new data shows training lags behind rapid adoption, fuelling insecurity and scepticism.
When women mentor and network with one another, they transform individual careers into collective momentum for gender equality.
One in four women has left venture capital in five years, spurring calls for data-driven fixes to stalled careers and leaky retention.