Career Guidance
The Real Reason HR Keeps Getting Blamed, and How to Actually Fix It
Ask most employees what HR is for, and you'll get some version of the same answer: they're the people who handle disciplinaries, sign off holiday requests, and send round the annual engagement survey nobody remembers filling in. Ask HR professionals the same question, and you'll often hear something closer to frustration. They know they're capable of more. They just rarely get the room to prove it.
The Recruitment Market Has Changed. Most Hiring Processes Haven't
Hiring has quietly become harder, even in a market where headlines swing between talk of layoffs and talk of skills shortages within the same week. That contradiction is confusing if you're trying to make sense of it from the outside, but it makes sense once you understand what's actually driving it: this isn't a story about too many or too few candidates. It's a story about mismatch.
How HR Actually Fixes a Broken Team, and Where It Often Gets It Wrong
Most team problems don't announce themselves. They show up as missed deadlines that get blamed on workload, a good performer who suddenly starts disengaging, or a project that quietly stalls because two people who need to collaborate have stopped speaking directly to each other. By the time it reaches HR as a formal issue, it's usually been building for months.
The Problems Keeping Directors Up at Night in 2026
Leadership has always come with pressure, but the shape of that pressure has shifted. Directors today aren't just managing growth targets and shareholder expectations. They're navigating a workforce that's harder to plan around, technology that's changing faster than most organisations can absorb it, and cost pressures that leave very little room for the kind of long, patient hiring decisions that used to be standard practice.
Jobs Are Disappearing Fast. Here's What the Research Actually Shows
Barely a week goes by without a headline warning that a huge share of jobs are about to vanish. Some of that concern is justified. Much of it is overstated, or at least missing the more useful half of the story. To understand what's actually happening, it helps to separate the genuine structural shift underway from the noise around it.