A look at how the workplace evolved in 2025, based on insights from HBR's global social media community. Key themes include AI adoption, the importance of people and purpose, and disruptions like layoffs. The article explores the impact of AI tools, new work relationships, and leadership dynamics, with resources to help readers navigate these changes.
2025 was a year of big change—in general, and in the workplace. Maybe you were asked to return to the office after years of working remotely. Maybe your company started to adopt new AI tools. Or maybe you had to grapple with uncertainty due to policy shifts and economic volatility.
We wanted to learn more about people’s experiences, so we asked HBR’s global social media community: How did your work change this year? For many of our readers, their job transformed; for example, AI changed the nature of getting tasks done. For others, this year shifted their relationship to work, leadership, productivity, and purpose. In total, three major themes stood out: AI adoption ; the importance of people and purpose; and major disruptions like layoffs, funding cuts, or career pivots. Alongside a sampling of responses we gathered on LinkedIn and Instagram, we’ve also included HBR resources on these trends, changes, and challenges so you can meet them head-on. Artificial intelligence tools were widely adopted at work—to varying success. “Can you write a post for 2025 without using two letters…AI? Collaboration still seems to be a priority in 2025, while trying to be more streamlined.” —Michael, a consultant in Michigan “On one hand, this led to new unlocks of productivity/work I could have never done by myself in the past. On the other hand, there is constant FOMO re: did I pick the right AI tool to build literacy inside of or should I have waited for the next thing that came out…” —Evan, a founder in Boston, Massachusetts “2025 was the year we finally admitted that plugging AI into broken bureaucratic processes is like installing electric lights in a factory still powered by steam engines. It made the workplace ‘brighter’ but the machines didn’t run any faster. That ‘Steam Engine Trap’ explains why we previously saw 90-95% failure rates in gen AI initiatives. We were automating chaos instead of fixing the workflow.” —Maciej, a founder in Warsaw, Poland “SIGNIFICANTLY more reliant on ChatGPT.” —Stefan “I relearned how to learn, make better decisions with AI, truly understand my employees.” —Maria “Saw how AI is useful for rote tasks, but it still needs cleanup after.” —Sharon “More effort expended filtering out useless AI news slop.”—Kelvin, a consultant in Seattle Learn more: AI-Generated “Workslop” Is Destroying Productivity How People Are Really Using Gen AI in 2025 The 5 AI Tensions Leaders Need to Navigate Recalculating the Costs and Benefits of Gen AI Teams succeed when leaders prioritize people and purpose. “2025 changed me in ways no new tool or policy could. It slowed me down and pushed me to rethink long-held assumptions about productivity. I found myself paying far more attention to trust, transparency, and how people actually feel at work—not just what they deliver. That shift taught me that sustainable performance comes from clarity and psychological safety, not speed or pressure.” —Venkata, an IT professional in Hyderabad, India “In 2025, work didn’t just speed up; it became more demanding on people. We saw leaders and teams carrying heavier cognitive load, lower psychological safety, and more pressure to perform with fewer buffers. At the same time, AI accelerated faster than many organizations were ready for, reshaping roles, expectations, and decision-making. What made the biggest difference this year wasn’t more tools; it was more human capability: clearer communication, stronger emotional regulation, better boundaries, and safer conversations when stress or uncertainty spiked. When people feel supported and grounded, they’re far better equipped to use AI effectively rather than feel overwhelmed by it. If this year taught us anything, it’s that the future of work depends on people who can think clearly, lead confidently, and stay connected—especially as technology continues to evolve around them.” —Janelle, a consultant in Sunshine Coast, Australia “2025 changed the way I lead. It showed me that teams rarely struggle because the work is hard. They struggle because the ground underneath them keeps moving. I learned that leadership is less about giving direction and far more about giving people something steady to stand on. Clarity isn’t a message. Calm isn’t a personality trait. They’re conditions. And leaders create those conditions or they don’t. This year I paid closer attention to the moments before the work even begins—the energy people carry in, the questions they hesitate to ask, the pressure they hold quietly so they don’t slow anyone down. What changed wasn’t my strategy. What changed was the atmosphere I’m responsible for shaping. The biggest lesson of 2025: leadership is the feeling you leave in the room. People think better when that feeling is steady. They break when it isn’t. Going into 2026: Less rushing. More grounding. Less noise. More intention. And a commitment to giving people the stability they need to rise.” —Jose, a healthcare professional in New Jersey “2025 revealed that the greatest challenge wasn’t the changing tech landscape. It was supporting people through the change. AI upended the workplace, including my own. But the real insight? Efficiency and effectiveness mean nothing if we lose sight of the humans navigating the shift. Now, everything I do is filtered through one lens: how does this support people, in the workplace, as customers, and in society at large?” —Karida, a founder and talent professional in Washington, D.C. “I invested more in emotional intelligence, compassion, and cooperation. We’ve built more trust and built stronger work relationships, re-aligning mission and goals. Feels more productive and less stressful this way.” —Marian, a senior care professional in Portsmouth, England “2025 reshaped work by forcing a shift from activity to impact. Teams moved away from volume-based output and toward clarity, alignment, and measurable outcomes. Strategy became the differentiator, not tools, not trends. The organizations that thrived were the ones that prioritized focused execution, tighter feedback loops, and content or communication built to drive decisions, not noise. In a year defined by change, the biggest shift wasn’t workload; it was the expectation that every action must connect to performance.” —Michele, a marketer in Indianapolis Learn more: Why Kindness Isn’t a Nice to Have Do You Know If Your Team Is Overwhelmed? What People Get Wrong About Psychological Safety In Tough Times, Psychological Safety Is a Requirement, Not a Luxury Layoffs, restructuring, funding cuts, return-to-office mandates, and career pivots changed many people’s day-to-day. “As someone who is fresh out of university, 2025 was a true roller coaster ride for me. I took a leap of faith to leave a permanent role in a stable multinational to join a FinTech startup, but unfortunately the company did not survive, and here I am in another company and industry. All this whilst I am pursuing further studies and co-authoring new articles as well.” —Kenneth, an HR professional in Singapore “Here we are all back in the office, full time, thank God. I missed that.” —Greg, an entrepreneur in Portugal “Return to office mandate. Less productivity and more cost.” —Kailene “Had to career pivot because of funding cuts due to administration.” —Erica “ elimination of DEI programs.” —Sara “I got let go and it has been very hard to find a challenging, well-paying full-time job.” —Gautam “Laid off from biotech, pivoted back to nonprofit where I’m much happier.” —Erin “Started a business and proudly failed, I learned many things, I will roar again.” —Viraj Learn more: What Comes After DEI How to Lead When Employees Are Worried About Job Security The CEO of Save the Children U.S. on Navigating a Sudden Funding Crisis In Uncertain Times, Ask These Questions Before You Make a Decision How to Build Career Resilience in Uncertain Times New Research on How Layoffs Affect the Labor Market
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