The future of work is changing fast. Future Focus cuts through the noise with three trends each week that matter most to HR and business leaders. When everything else is in flux, stay focused with Future Focus.
How Shipping Is on the Cusp of a Global Carbon Charge (Bloomberg)
What to Know: Global negotiators are weighing a carbon price on maritime emissions that would add costs to ocean freight and help steer the sector toward cleaner fuels. The U.S. is pushing back on the idea of a carbon charge, fueling debate about how fees would be set, how revenue might be used, and whether the plan would meaningfully cut emissions.
Where to Focus: If a carbon price lands, freight costs and delivery timelines could shift quickly, affecting profit margins, inventory strategies, and targets for Scope 3 greenhouse gas emissions. For HR leaders in logistics, manufacturing, and retail, this could translate into cost-containment measures and a renewed focus on sustainability roles. As environmental, social, and governance (ESG) goals expand to include supply chain accountability, HR’s role in workforce planning and change management will be critical in aligning talent and operational strategy with new environmental expectations.
AI Has This Harmful Belief About Women (Fast Company)
What to Know: A large-scale study of 1.4 million images and videos, plus nine major artificial intelligence models, found that women were systematically portrayed as and inferred to be younger than men. AI’s bias toward women’s ages also intensified when it depicted women in higher-status occupations. Additionally, the research shows that AI-generated resume assessments assumed women were younger and less experienced.
Where to Focus: Biased systems can distort hiring funnels, undermine pay equity, and invite regulatory and reputational exposure as AI use in HR becomes more visible to candidates, employees, and policymakers.
Amazon Is Putting Prescription Drugs in Vending Machines
(The Verge)
What to Know: Amazon is launching pharmacy kiosks at One Medical clinics, aiming to cut delays and reduce the number of unfilled prescriptions through pharmacist verification and app-based checkout. Although the machines won’t dispense controlled or refrigerated medications, patients will be able to pick up the most common prescriptions within minutes of their visit.
Where to Focus: Point-of-care prescription kiosks mark a new era of convenience-driven health care. As employees grow accustomed to instant, app-based access to care, they’ll expect similar convenience from their benefits experience. HR leaders should explore innovations such as telehealth expansion, onsite or near-site clinic partnerships, and personalized benefits platforms to make health coverage as seamless as possible — because convenience has become a key differentiator in employee satisfaction and retention.
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