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Are you scared?
To:Brew Readers
HR Brew // Morning Brew // Update
These experts are about the future of work.

Hello, hello! Is it true that you can get paid in exposure? The NFL seems to think so. The league paid Bad Bunny just $1,000 for his Super Bowl Halftime performance, similar to artists who performed in years past, arguing that the millions of viewers who tune in more than make up for paying his typical appearance fees.

In today’s edition:

AI anxiety

Mind the managers

Compliance complications

—Mikaela Cohen, Paige McGlauflin, Courtney Vinopal

HR STRATEGY

Employee and robot

Illustration: Brittany Holloway-Brown, Photos: Adobe Stock

Uncertain, confused, unstable—just a couple of adjectives that describe how workers likely feel right now.

This is especially true for young workers—namely Gen Z and Gen Alpha—who’ve only ever known this whirlwind of a workplace and will, along with millennials, make up 80% of the labor market in advanced economies by 2034, according to the World Economic Forum.

The future of work will be the reality for these generations—but it doesn’t look too shiny, experts shared with HR Brew.

“There’s widespread anxiety,” Jon Carson, co-founder of the College Guidance Network that works with high school students and parents on college admissions, told HR Brew. “I heard about a parent whose kid, out of the blue, texted them, and said, ‘I’m really stressed. I don’t know how I’m going to live the kind of life that you’re living.’”

For more on how AI is affecting young workers, keep reading here.—MC

Presented By Form Health

HR STRATEGY

Businesspeople on game pieces

Andrii Yalanskyi/Getty Images

Most companies these days are like caterpillars, wanting to metamorphose into new phases—whether shifting toward AI, undergoing a merger, or restructuring to stay afloat in an uncertain economy.

While some companies are embarking on substantial changes, the majority aren’t likely to achieve all of their original goals. Consulting giant McKinsey estimated that only 31% of corporations reported successful transformation in 2021, and Bain more recently suggested that 88% of organizations don’t hit the mark on their ambitions.) The reason why, recent research from Bain suggested, could be one critical disconnect between a company’s leadership and workforce.

Most (88%) senior leaders believe their restructuring will achieve its aims, but only 36% of workers agree, according to a Bain survey of around 1,000 global executives and employees who recently underwent such changes.

The issue isn’t poor communication about the transformation, but rather leadership’s inability to tie goals to workers’ day-to-day jobs.

For more on how HR can help bridge the gap between leaders and workers, keep reading here.—PM

TOTAL REWARDS

Illustration of a person with two children looking at a calendar, with hand holding money in background.

Getty Images

A growing number of state and local laws are spurring employers to expand their paid leave programs, but these policies also pose additional compliance challenges.

Nearly three-quarters of US employers plan to expand their leave programs over the next two years, according to a recent survey from advisory firm WTW. Paid caregiver leave will likely see the most significant expansion over the next two years, with up to 39% of employers offering it, from 22% currently.

Offering paid time off to bond with a new child has become a “cultural norm” among more employers, “because there’s obviously an absence of a federal program that would provide a similar paid benefit,” Alex Henry, WTW’s group benefits leader, told HR Brew.

Efforts to pass a paid family and medical leave policy at the federal level have been unsuccessful, spurring both private companies and state legislatures to take action. Thirteen states and Washington, DC currently have paid family and medical leave laws on the books; Minnesota’s is the latest to take effect.

For more on the compliance challenges associated with paid leave programs, keep reading here.—CV

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WORK PERKS

A desktop computer plugged into a green couch.

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top HR reads.

Stat: If you had a lot of post-Super Bowl employee absences yesterday, you’re not alone: 26.2 million employed Americans planned to take Monday off. (UKG)

Quote: “We are telling clients with existing visas that they should guard them with their lives.” —Christi Jackson, a London-based US immigration lawyer, on the US embassy in the UK denying visas to anyone with a criminal history, even minor offenses (the Financial Times)

Read: Hollywood could see another “hot labor summer” this year, as the contracts that ended the writers and actors strikes are set to expire on May 1 and June 30, respectively. This time, issues like stricter AI guardrails and streaming residuals are expected to be discussed at the negotiating table. (the New York Times)

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