Wellable Weekly

Workplace in Transition: The AI Investment

14 min · 6 de may de 2026
portada del episodio Workplace in Transition: The AI Investment

Descripción

In this week’s episode, Nick and Geoff explore how companies are reallocating resources to fund AI projects and what that means for employees. From layoffs and voluntary buyouts to reductions in parental leave and other core benefits, they unpack the different strategies organizations are using to cut costs to fund token use, data centers, and other AI investments. The conversation also dives into how these shifts are influencing employee experience, talent retention, and even the growing popularity of health fairs as a way to communicate difficult benefits changes. Key Takeaways • Companies are shifting significant dollars toward AI investments, including infrastructure, compute, and tokens, which are affecting the balance between human and technological capital while forcing difficult trade-offs in workforce spending • Layoffs remain the most visible cost-cutting strategy, but organizations are also using quieter approaches like benefit reductions, return-to-office mandates, and voluntary buyouts to manage headcount • Zoom and Deloitte have made notable cuts to parental leave and other core benefits, signaling a broader trend of scaling back high-value employee perks introduced during the pandemic • Voluntary buyouts, like Microsoft’s program, may unintentionally push out top talent, since employees with the strongest external opportunities are often the most likely to opt in • The labor market has shifted in favor of employers, giving companies more leverage to make unpopular changes while expecting many employees to stay • Health fairs and similar engagement initiatives may be rising in popularity as organizations look for more positive, engaging ways to communicate benefit reductions

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y forma parte de la comunidad de Wellable Weekly!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

29 episodios

episode The Price of AI: Booed Speeches & Cut Benefits artwork

The Price of AI: Booed Speeches & Cut Benefits

In this week's episode, Nick and Geoff start by breaking down two stories about how AI is affecting the modern workforce. They dig into why Gen Z graduates are booing commencement speakers who tout AI's promise and discuss a company that suspended its 401k match mid-year to fund AI investment. They also unpack the Bolt CEO's headline-making decision to fire his entire HR team. Key Takeaways * Gen Z graduates are booing commencement speakers who frame AI as an exciting opportunity, reflecting their real anxiety about entering the current labor market in light of all the AI-driven layoffs * TTEC suspended its 401k employer match mid-year and redirected those funds toward AI tools and infrastructure, signaling a troubling new willingness to treat previously untouchable compensation benefits as variable costs * Once a few prominent companies adjust benefits previously considered off-limits, it lowers the bar for others to follow, a pattern already playing out across parental leave and other benefits * Few CEOs have publicly committed to distributing AI gains to employees, and profit-sharing or bonus contingency plans tied to AI-driven growth would meaningfully change how workforce cuts are received * ClickUp offers a rare counterexample, cutting 22% of its workforce while introducing $1 million salary bands for remaining staff, connecting the restructuring to a tangible upside for those who stay * Bolt CEO Ryan Breslow fired his entire HR team, but the core functions didn't disappear—they were redistributed to a People Ops team, making the move less radical than advertised

Ayer23 min
episode Google's WHOOP Killer, Tokenmaxxing, and the AI Metric Trap artwork

Google's WHOOP Killer, Tokenmaxxing, and the AI Metric Trap

In this week's episode, Nick and Geoff break down two headlines. First, they dig into the Fitbit Air, Google and Fitbit's new screenless wearable that's being called the Whoop killer. Then they tackle tokenmaxxing, the emerging workplace behavior of inflating AI usage to impress managers, and what Goodhart's Law tells us about tying performance metrics to AI usage.  Key Takeaways * The Fitbit Air mirrors Whoop's screenless form factor but doesn't require a paid subscription, offering a one-time purchase with an optional $10/month Google Gemini-powered health coaching upgrade and making it a potentially more accessible entry point for consumers and employers * The Fitbit Air's consistent design, lower price point, and no required subscription make it a stronger candidate for employer bulk purchasing than past devices like the Apple Watch * Consumer health products that gain mainstream buzz—like wearables did a decade ago—tend to eventually work their way into employee wellness program conversations, whether HR teams plan for it or not * AI-powered personal health coaching at the individual level raises a longer-term question: could hyper-personalized consumer devices eventually fragment the traditional employer wellness program model? * Tokenmaxxing—employees deliberately overusing AI tools to signal productivity rather than accomplish meaningful work—has emerged at Amazon and reflects a predictable response to ambiguous performance expectations around AI * Goodhart's Law applies directly to AI adoption: when token usage becomes the target metric, employees optimize for usage rather than outcomes, driving up costs without improving results * HR leaders designing AI performance frameworks now have an opportunity to anchor expectations to outcomes and treat AI usage as context, not the measure itself  https://youtu.be/v4xrW2FVEq4?si=7WOiBjObH85YBXr5

20 de may de 202618 min
episode Addressing Employee Well-Being in an Era of Burnout and Uncertainty with Chase Sterling artwork

Addressing Employee Well-Being in an Era of Burnout and Uncertainty with Chase Sterling

In this week's episode, Geoff sits down with Chase Sterling, founder and executive director of Wellbeing Think Tank [https://www.wellbeingthinktank.org/], to explore what it truly takes to build a healthy workplace in today's environment. Chase brings over 20 years of workplace wellness expertise to a candid conversation about how organizations can build a healthy, resilient workplace even in uncertain times.  Key Takeaways * Wellbeing Think Tank started as a side passion project to break down silos in workplace wellness and has grown into a full-time nonprofit organization offering free events, evidence-based resources, memberships, and trainings * As AI reshapes the way we work, the organizations best positioned for the future are those treating it as a tool to automate tasks and reduce mental load, not a replacement for human connection and creativity * There's no such thing as survey fatigue. It's inaction fatigue; employees are eager to share feedback when they trust that their organization will listen and respond meaningfully * Organizations often invest in programs based on assumptions rather than actual employee needs, leading to well-intentioned but misaligned spending that frustrates both employers and employees * The healthiest workplaces focus on the fundamentals (making employees feel seen, heard, and valued) and let core mission, vision, and values genuinely guide policy and decision-making * Organizations that embrace the art of listening and have strong, healthy cultures can weather major disruption without major well-being declines

13 de may de 202636 min
episode Workplace in Transition: The AI Investment artwork

Workplace in Transition: The AI Investment

In this week’s episode, Nick and Geoff explore how companies are reallocating resources to fund AI projects and what that means for employees. From layoffs and voluntary buyouts to reductions in parental leave and other core benefits, they unpack the different strategies organizations are using to cut costs to fund token use, data centers, and other AI investments. The conversation also dives into how these shifts are influencing employee experience, talent retention, and even the growing popularity of health fairs as a way to communicate difficult benefits changes. Key Takeaways • Companies are shifting significant dollars toward AI investments, including infrastructure, compute, and tokens, which are affecting the balance between human and technological capital while forcing difficult trade-offs in workforce spending • Layoffs remain the most visible cost-cutting strategy, but organizations are also using quieter approaches like benefit reductions, return-to-office mandates, and voluntary buyouts to manage headcount • Zoom and Deloitte have made notable cuts to parental leave and other core benefits, signaling a broader trend of scaling back high-value employee perks introduced during the pandemic • Voluntary buyouts, like Microsoft’s program, may unintentionally push out top talent, since employees with the strongest external opportunities are often the most likely to opt in • The labor market has shifted in favor of employers, giving companies more leverage to make unpopular changes while expecting many employees to stay • Health fairs and similar engagement initiatives may be rising in popularity as organizations look for more positive, engaging ways to communicate benefit reductions

6 de may de 202614 min
episode Rethinking Screenings, GLP-1s, and Smarter Health Decisions with Al Lewis artwork

Rethinking Screenings, GLP-1s, and Smarter Health Decisions with Al Lewis

In this guest episode, Nick sits down with Al Lewis, founder of Quizzify and the Validation Institute, to challenge long-held assumptions about workplace wellness. From his dramatic reversal on health screenings to a deep dive into GLP-1 education strategies, Al shares candid insights on what works and what does not in employee health. The conversation explores how a new, low-cost screening technology could reshape population health strategies, why most wellness ROI claims fall short, and how employers can better manage the surge in demand for weight loss drugs. Key Takeaways * Al Lewis has reversed his stance on biometric screenings after investing in a new, non-invasive technology that delivers similar insights at a much lower cost and with greater accessibility * Traditional screenings often fail due to high costs, administrative burden, and false positives, making them inefficient at scale * Many wellness ROI claims should be viewed critically, as they often rely on self-reported outcomes and selective data that do not accurately reflect true behavior change or cost savings * GLP-1 drugs are growing in popularity, but high dropout rates highlight the need for better education and expectation setting * Educational content can help employers guide employees through GLP-1 decisions and improve long-term success

29 de abr de 202635 min