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Choose the human path for AI. John C Head III Dean Rick Locke on the future of work.

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5341 - 5350 out of 10182
Institute for Work and Employment Research Career

December 2025 Issue of IWER Newsletter Now Available Online

The December 2025 issue of the newsletter of the MIT Institute for Work and Employment Research is now available online. The theme is "Insights on Upward Economic Mobility."

Dec 5, 2025
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MIT Executive MBA Leadership

From Strategy to Stewardship: A Transformative Leadership Journey Through the MIT EMBA

Ritesh Ramesh is CEO of MDaudit and a member of the MIT Executive MBA Class of 2017.

Dec 9, 2025
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Alumni Entrepreneurship

Merging Career Experience and Academic Learning For Greater Impact

By Andrew Husband

Following a long career at Huawei, Hugo Huang, SFMBA ’20, came to MIT Sloan to learn more.

Dec 9, 2025
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MIT GCFP

TUE DEC 9: President Tharman Shanmugaratnam

By MIT GCFP - News and Announcements MIT GCFP - Events MIT GCFP - Featured

Miriam Pozen Prize Award Ceremony and Lecture by Tharman Shanmugaratnam on Tuesday, December 9, 2025.

Nov 19, 2025
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MIT Kuo Sharper Center for Prosperity and Entrepreneurship Future of Work

Future of Work in 21st Century Africa: Changing Trends in Talent

By Regie Mauricio

Reflections of experiences sourcing talent and scaling ventures on the African continent, including, the challenges in attracting and retaining the right talent for a business and how opportunities often overlook the potential of youth and women.

Jun 4, 2021
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MBA

Navigating MIT Sloan: The Experience of a Student, Veteran, and Parent

Cait Haner, MBA ’22, spent eight years in the U.S. Army before she began her journey at MIT Sloan. She shares her experience as a student, veteran, and parent and offers advice for those looking at the program.

May 23, 2022
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MBA Diversity

Confidence in Community

By Admissions

Community is everything for Johana Muriel Grajales, MBA ’22. Originally from Colombia, with a background in the nonprofit sector, Johana came to MIT Sloan looking to find a community that would support her ultimate goal of being a more impactful leader.

Apr 23, 2021
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Alumni Leadership

Top 10 Alumni Stories of 2025

By Andrew Husband Catherine Shakin

In 2025, the MIT Sloan alumni community stayed busy finding a cure to pediatric brain cancer, publishing new research on leadership, and more.

Dec 16, 2025
Read More

What is the future of work?

Work and workplaces are changing rapidly. Learn what's next from MIT Sloan experts.
Find out how MIT Sloan is leading the future of work
Institute for Work and Employment Research (IWER)
Centers + Intiatives
MIT Institute for Work and Employment Research
IWER is a multidisciplinary and highly collaborative hub for the study of work and employment
Photo illustration of Simon Johnson and Daron Acemoglu
Centers + Intiatives
The Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
The Stone Center applies economics research to identify innovative ways to move the labor market onto a more equitable trajectory.
A human hand and a robotic hand hold interlocking gears of varying colors against a green background.
Executive Education
Leading the Future of Work
This course prepare you, and your organization, for an evolving workplace as it investigates its impact on social, legal, and economic policy.


MIT hasn’t just prepared me for the future of work—it’s pushed me to study it. As AI systems become more capable, more of our online activity will be carried out by artificial agents. That raises big questions.
Profile Photo of Current PhD Student, Benjamin Manning
Benjamin Manning

PhD Student


I think, at its most generous, AI tools enable us to learn from our collective actions ... What AI tools do is they take all of those solutions, those attempts—whether good or bad—and use them as training data to build models.
Headshot of MIT Sloan Professor Danielle Li
Danielle Li

David Sarnoff Professor of Management of Technology; Professor, Technological Innovation, Entrepreneurship, and Strategic Management


To me, the future of work means democracy. It’s hard to have any positive vision of work without meaningfully engaging workers. This is why I research economic democracy—worker voice is pivotal in designing good jobs.
Alexander Busch 2
Alex Busch

PhD Student


The rise of generative AI is a real opportunity, but making the most of it will demand a new approach to decision-making, as well as a new focus on worker training, fair transitions, and effective policy.
Professor Thomas A. Kochan headshot
Thomas Kochan

George Maverick Bunker Professor of Management, Emeritus; Professor of Human Resources and Management, Emeritus


Combinations of humans and AI work best when each party can do the thing they do better than the other.
Thomas Malone
Thomas W. Malone

Patrick J. McGovern (1959) Professor of Management; Director, MIT Center for Collective Intelligence; Professor, Information Technology
 

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Illustration of robot hands doing a variety of things
Centers + Intiatives
MIT Work of the Future at the IPC
Growing out of MIT's Work of the Future Task Force (2018-2020), the Work of the Future Initiative at the Industrial Performance Center conducts multidisciplinary research on the ways technology is changing work.
A human hand and a robot hand touch a lightbulb with flares
Download
Workforce development in the age of AI
MIT experts share strategies to transform skills, roles, and human potential across your organization.
Gears surrounded by code and other digital imagery
Centers + Intiatives
MIT Initiative for New Manufacturing
INM is an MIT-wide effort that drives research, education, and collaborations to transform the future of manufacturing in the United States and beyond.

The Future of Work

A robot hand with various professionals presented from industries ranging from healthcare, science, and manufacturing
Choose the human path for AI
To realize the greatest gains from artificial intelligence, we must make the future of work more human, not less.
Excerpt of "Power and Progress Mini-Comic!"
Who benefits from AI? New comic explores technology’s impact on labor
A free comic book adapts MIT Nobel Prize-winning economists’ work on how AI and technological change affect workers and shared prosperity.
An illustration of workers talking into a megaphone on top of a line chart going up to the right
For manufacturers, listening to workers pays off in productivity
Companies that act on input from front-line employees pay their workers more and experience a productivity bump that offsets those costs.
Silhouettes of various employees in a larger than life quantum computer
Building a quantum workforce
The Quantum Index Report from MIT documents a growing demand for quantum skills and emerging efforts to train a quantum workforce.
PhD student Ben Manning sits at a desk in the MIT Sloan PhD offices. He looks down at a tablet, talking to someone out of frame.
PhD Student Benjamin Manning Explores How AI Will Shape the Future of Work
“MIT hasn’t just prepared me for the future of work—it’s pushed me to study it."
Artificial intelligence and machine learning concept. Abstract technology background.
Media: CIO
Humanizing AI: Empowering people, not replacing them
AI works best not when it replaces humans, but when it augments them. As professor Thomas W. Malone, director of the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence, puts it: "Combinations of humans and AI work best when each party can do the thing they do better than the other."

Faculty Publications

The cover for the book Accelerating Innovation, which reads "Accelerating Innovation: Competitive Advantage Through Ecosystem Engagement by Phil Budden and Fiona Murray"
Accelerating Innovation: Competitive Advantage Through Ecosystem Engagement
Senior lecturer Phil Budden and associate dean for innovation Fiona Murray provide a practical guide to engaging with the five key stakeholders in an innovation ecosystem.
The cover for the book The Meritocracy Paradox, which reads "The Meritocracy Paradox Where Talent Management Strategies Go Wrong and How to Fix Them by Emilio J. Castilla"
The Meritocracy Paradox: Where Talent Management Strategies Go Wrong and How to…
MIT Sloan professor Emilio J. Castilla offers practical solutions to help organizations build fairer, more effective people management practices.
The cover for the book Power and Progress, which reads "Power and Progress: Our 1000-Year Struggle Over Technology and Prosperity by Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson"
Power and Progress: Our 1000-Year Struggle Over Technology and Prosperity
In their book, “Power and Progress,” Nobel laureates Daron Acemoglu, Institute professor, and Simon Johnson, MIT Sloan professor, ask whether the benefits of AI will be shared widely or feed inequality.
A human hand and a robotic hand hold interlocking gears of varying colors against a green background.
Alumni Leaders
MIT Alumni are shaping the future of work.
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Ideas Made to Matter: Future of Work
Ideas and insights about the future of work from MIT Sloan.
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Artificial Intelligence

MIT Sloan leads AI research and teaching. Dive in to discover why.
Explore Topic
A person uses a virtual AI assistant
MIT Initiative on the Digital Economy
4 new studies about agentic AI from the MIT Initiative on the Digital Economy
New research ranges from how AI agents negotiate to how “personality pairing” can optimize human-AI collaboration.
AI and human hand touching
Special Report
MIT Sloan insights for success in AI-driven organizations
Experts share innovative ideas for using artificial intelligence to solve critical business problems and deliver on strategy.
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Teaching & Learning Resources
Generative AI for Teaching & Learning
Explore our resources to unlock AI's potential for enhancing teaching and learning at MIT Sloan.

Centers, Initiatives, and Programs

MIT Center for Collective Intelligence
Center for Information Systems Research
Computer Science and AI Lab
Master of Business Analytics
Business Analytics Certificate
AI Executive Education

AI at MIT Sloan

A robot hand with various professionals presented from industries ranging from healthcare, science, and manufacturing
Choose the human path for AI
To realize the greatest gains from artificial intelligence, we must make the future of work more human, not less.
a cybord hand holds the earth
Beyond the algorithm: AI’s societal impact
MIT Sloan research explores the promise and limits of using AI in medicine, hiring, and creative pursuits.

AI at Work Newsletter

Research and insights powering the intersection of AI and business, delivered to your inbox monthly.
Sign up
An illustration of a robot hand holding a magnifying glass with the justice scales magnified
AI is reinventing hiring — with the same old biases. Here’s how to avoid that t…
The AI hiring revolution doesn’t have to be a story of automated bias, argues MIT Sloan’s Emilio J. Castilla. Tough questions and constant monitoring can lead to fairer systems.
An AI looking snake with digital brain and network connection lines in the background
How to spot real value in AI — and avoid the snake oil
A new book aims to help business leaders separate real AI value from overhyped claims.
A robot holds a scale, while a human hand touches it
How organizations build a culture of AI ethics
From risk management policies to the five stages of AI ethics, here’s how some organizations approach ethical AI.
A magnifying glass shines a light on a wall of image collages
Bringing transparency to the data used to train artificial intelligence
Using the wrong datasets to train artificial intelligence models can result in legal risks, bias, or lower-quality models. The Data Provenance Initiative’s tool can help.
illustration of a woman working at a computer, beside books. There is electronic circuitry imagery in the background, meant to be suggestive of artificial intelligence
Media: Bloomberg
MIT Harnesses AI to Accelerate Startup Ambitions
Paul Cheek, executive director of the Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship said: "Our mission at the Trust Center is to advance the field of innovation-driven entrepreneurship everywhere. We can't do it with intuition or by throwing stuff against the wall. We have to practice entrepreneurship in a rigorous, systematic way that increases the odds of success."


Managers and workers need to collectively develop new expectations and work practices to ensure that any work done in collaboration with generative AI meets the values, goals, and standards of their key stakeholders.
MIT Sloan Professor Kate Kellogg
Kate Kellogg

David J. McGrath jr (1959) Professor of Management and Innovation


I've gained deep insights into cutting-edge technologies and had the chance to connect and network with industry leaders ... [T]aking courses or working on projects related to deep learning has been a rewarding experience.
Anne Buisson in the cafeteria.
Anne Castille Buisson

MBAn ’24


This technology’s deepest impact on the world of work will come as it’s used to reimagine entire organizations. This deep reimagination will be a decentralized and distributed phenomenon, carried out by innovators and entrepreneurs.
A headshot of Andrew McAfee
Andrew McAfee

Co-Director, MIT IDE & Principal Research Scientist, MIT Sloan


You need to be talking about AI along with specific initiatives and the outcomes you want to achieve using it. And those outcomes need to be compelling for your organization.
Headshot of Barbara Wixom
Barbara Wixom

Principal research scientist at the MIT Center for Information Systems Research

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Ideas Made to Matter: AI
Ideas and insights about artificial intelligence from MIT Sloan
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AI Expert Spotlight Series
MIT experts share the most exciting—and concerning—aspects of AI.
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