As HR leaders brace for 2026, organizations are grappling with profound shifts, from AI-driven workforce disruption to tightening labor pipelines, rising productivity pressures, and widening leadership gaps. The latest talent roundup highlights the strategies CHROs need now: rethinking early-career talent models, modernizing hiring through consumer-grade experiences, redesigning performance management with purpose, and strengthening succession planning to protect organizational continuity. Together, these insights offer a roadmap for navigating uncertainty and building a more resilient, future-ready workforce.
4 Talent Trends CHROs Must Know in 2026
AI disruption and economic uncertainty are reshaping 2026 talent strategies, pushing CHROs to overhaul early-career pipelines, internal mobility, and performance management. As entry-level roles shrink through automation, HR must redesign hiring, development, and rewards to build future midlevel talent. Rapid skill shifts are also driving organizations to prioritize internal recruiting, yet mobility systems remain passive. Productivity pressures are rising as many organizations tolerate underperformance, requiring stronger performance management discipline. At the same time, managers are already using AI in performance decisions, making HR guidance and governance essential.
Marriott Upgraded Hiring with a Consumer-Grade Experience
After COVID-19 wiped out 90% of its business, Marriott had to rebuild its workforce quickly — exposing outdated tech and overreliance on an RPO. Bringing talent acquisition back in-house enabled faster hiring, revamped technology, and a modernized candidate experience.
Marriott streamlined its career site, added AI tools like Paradox, automated interview scheduling, and integrated assessments to maintain quality. Time-to-fill dropped from 30 days to under 20 days, and 70% of hires now come through the career site. Looking ahead, Marriott aims to use AI to boost recruiter capacity and improve the experience for rejected candidates.
Designing Performance Management with Vision and Purpose
Performance management is a top 2025 priority, yet only 31% of HR leaders say their systems meet organizational needs. Gartner’s Laura Gardiner stressed that redesigns take two to three years, requiring a clear “why” to guide decisions amid shifting expectations and technology.
HR must balance efficiency with robustness and choose a model aligned to business goals — accountable, gentle, continuous, or dynamic. While most organizations still focus on documentation, dynamic approaches are growing. Gardiner cautioned that eliminating performance management rarely works; leading with organizational needs is essential.
Lack of Succession Planning Puts Small Businesses at Risk
Small businesses employ nearly half of U.S. workers, yet many lack succession plans as owners near retirement. Experts warn that treating succession as a large-company issue only creates major risks such as loss of institutional knowledge, continuity gaps, and high-potential talent walking out the door.
HR should embed succession planning early by defining needed skills, building career paths, and developing internal leaders through mentoring and performance reviews. Family-owned businesses face added emotional complexity, requiring clear expectations, structured onboarding, and open communication to ensure smooth transitions.
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