WorkTech Podcast

The WorkTech Podcast explores the critical trends shaping the future of work and HR tech. George LaRocque of WorkTech, drawing from years of advising top innovators, investors, and enterprises, guides you through market deals, issues, opportunities, and trends—all through a strategic, actionable lens.

  1. Beyond the AI Smokescreen

    7시간 전

    Beyond the AI Smokescreen

    In this comprehensive April 2026 edition of the Up Next @ WorkTech crosspod, George LaRocque (founder of WorkTech) and Kate Achille (The Devon Group) reunite after a season of travel and industry events to dissect the complex, often contradictory state of the modern workplace. The conversation strikes a balance between human-centric news, including Kate’s recognition as a Top Woman in PR and Communications, and the sobering reality of a tech sector undergoing a radical, AI-driven transformation. The episode dives deep into the late-April "layoff season," focusing on the divergent strategies employed by industry titans Meta and Microsoft. While Meta has announced significant cuts, slashing 8,000 positions and closing 6,000 open roles, the duo notes the "snarky" internal reality for those remaining: employees are reportedly being tasked as "AI training dummies," essentially training the models destined to replace their functions. In contrast, Microsoft is taking a more "human" approach through strategic buyouts aimed at its longest-tenured staff: those whose age and service years combined equal 70 or more. George and Kate discuss whether these layoffs are truly necessitated by AI or if the technology is serving as a "smokescreen" for companies to correct the over-hiring trends seen during the post-COVID boom. A provocative segment of the show explores the rise of "Office AI Leaderboards" at major corporations like JP Morgan and Disney. This trend, dubbed "token maxing," involves ranking white-collar workers based on their AI usage. George shares a striking anecdote of a Disney employee invoking the AI model Claude 460,000 times in just nine days. However, the hosts question the validity of these metrics. Citing observations from the CEO of Workable, George notes that while personal productivity (writing emails faster or generating 50-page briefs) has spiked, it has not yet translated into measurable business productivity, which still relies on human-centric alignment, communication, and leadership. They warn of the "AI slop" created when high usage is prioritized over competence. The episode also covers significant leadership changes at the Department of Labor (DOL). With Keith Sonderling stepping in as Acting Secretary of Labor, the hosts express cautious optimism. Known for his active engagement with the tech community to understand how AI is built and applied, Sonderling is viewed as a "steady" hand who may finally provide the federal regulatory guidance the workforce desperately needs. Finally, George provides an exclusive breakdown of the Q1 2026 WorkTech funding and M&A report. Key highlights include: $1.9 billion in capital raised across 58 deals, though "mega-deals" accounted for 68% of the total. An "hourglass" market effect, where early-stage startups and massive incumbents thrive while mid-market companies without AI-native models feel the squeeze. A surge in European consolidation, with Europe nearly matching the US in M&A transaction volume during the first quarter. The episode concludes with a "Rose and Thorn" segment, touching on the cultural impact of US policy abroad and Kate’s upcoming participation in a national athletic competition in Corpus Christi. On this episode Kate and George discuss AI Layoffs, Token Maxing, WorkTech M&A, Department of Labor, Keith Sonderling, Microsoft Buyouts, Meta AI Training, Human Capital Management (HCM), Business Productivity, HR Tech Trends, VC Funding 2026, Claude AI, Workforce Regulation, Employee Gamification, HR Brew Talent 2030.  The Great Tech Reset: Layoffs and Strategic BuyoutsGamification vs. True ProductivityRegulatory Shifts and the M&A Landscape Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    44분
  2. Crosschq Acquires Traitify: A $600B Play to Solve Hiring from the Frontline to the C-Suite

    3월 31일

    Crosschq Acquires Traitify: A $600B Play to Solve Hiring from the Frontline to the C-Suite

    In this episode of WorkTech, George LaRocque sits down with Crosschq CEO Mike “Fitz” Fitzsimmons to break down a strategically significant acquisition in the HR Tech market: Crosschq’s purchase of Traitify, the behavioral and cognitive assessment provider known for its scientifically validated, highly visual, candidate‑friendly assessment experience. Fitzsimmons reveals why the timing is ideal, how the deal came together, and why Traitify’s science‑backed approach to behavioral prediction and realistic job previews is a perfect fit for Crosschq’s expanding hiring intelligence platform. “We’re announcing an acquisition of a company called Traitify… a leading provider of behavioral and cognitive assessments," Fitzsimmons shares, underscoring the strategic importance of deeper candidate intelligence in an AI‑accelerated hiring landscape. The conversation explores how Crosschq has evolved from digital reference checking into a full‑scale quality‑of‑hire system of record spanning fraud detection, AI interviewing, interview intelligence, reference checking, and analytics. With Traitify's 50M+ completed assessments and a team of PhDs joining Crosschq, the combined platform now offers end‑to‑end intelligence from the moment a candidate enters the hiring funnel. This acquisition specifically positions Crosschq to scale into the $600B+ frontline labor market, where traditional methods often fail to address turnover rates that can exceed 100% in certain industries. By integrating Traitify's assessments, built on established frameworks like the Big Five, Crosschq aims to replace "intuition" with data-driven decisions that correlate directly with long-term performance.  Fitzsimmons highlights the long‑term vision: a unified, science‑validated, AI‑powered foundation model for hiring that continuously learns from outcome data. “We imagine a world where you could compress this all… into one unit of thing," he explains, emphasizing the shift toward integrated, predictive hiring workflows. In this episode, we look at HR Tech, M&A, talent intelligence, strategic consolidation, quality of hire, AI in hiring, and the Future of Work. Key Takeaways: Crosschq acquired Traitify to deepen its quality‑of‑hire platform with validated behavioral, cognitive, and job‑preview science, strengthening its position as an end‑to‑end hiring intelligence provider. The deal accelerates Crosschq's move toward a unified, integrated workflow/platform provider, combining assessments, AI interviewing, interview intelligence, fraud detection, and reference checking. Addressing the Frontline Turnover Crisis: The platform now targets the 80% of the global workforce in frontline roles, aiming to solve structural inefficiencies where fewer than half of new hires typically remain after one year. Traitify's 50M+ assessments and PhD‑led science team give Crosschq a defensible data advantage, enabling outcome‑linked, compliant, explainable AI. A New "System of Record": CEO Mike Fitzsimmons notes that hiring has historically lacked a true system of record for outcomes: "This deal creates a continuous learning loop where every candidate interaction is tied back to real-world performance data." Market timing is ideal, with employers shifting from “butts in seats" to ROI‑driven hiring and quality‑of‑hire becoming the top priority for TA leaders." Crosschq's new platinum partnership with Workday and deep integration with Paradox expand distribution and enterprise reach, signaling strong ecosystem alignment. Scientific Validity vs. "Opaque" AI: Unlike many new AI tools that rely on unvalidated signals, the Traitify integration ensures that all behavioral data is grounded in rigorous industrial-organizational psychology. The long‑term vision is a foundation model for hiring, trained on behavioral science, outcome data, and multimodal signals. A major step toward predictive, ethical, AI‑driven talent decisioning. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    25분
  3. Inside Blify’s $2.1M Pre‑Seed: The New Wave of AI‑Native Learning Software

    3월 19일

    Inside Blify’s $2.1M Pre‑Seed: The New Wave of AI‑Native Learning Software

    In this episode, George LaRocque sits down with Clément Lhommeau, co‑CEO and co‑Founder of Blify, the Paris‑based learning startup that just raised €1.8 million/$2.08 million in pre‑seed funding. Blify embeds learning directly into Slack, Microsoft Teams, and WhatsApp, creating an AI‑powered learning layer that eliminates the need for employees to log into a traditional LMS. Clément explains how the founding team blends deep HR tech experience, AI engineering excellence, and enterprise go‑to‑market expertise, including backgrounds at 360Learning, JobTeaser, and Alan. The conversation explores why now was the right moment to raise, with Clément noting that “everything goes very quickly in this market… even in the learning industry.” With 30 early customers across France, Europe, and global markets, Blify is focused on product, scalability, and co‑designing with design partners to reach true product‑market fit. Their long‑term vision: make the destination LMS obsolete and establish Blify as the intelligent learning layer for the enterprise. In this episode we look at HR Tech, startup funding, venture capital, AI‑powered learning, product‑market fit, Future of Work innovation, and early‑stage go‑to‑market strategy. Key Takeaways (Funding Strategy, Investor Signals, PMF) Blify raised €1.8M on vision, not features, positioning itself as a pioneer of a new wave of AI‑native learning software. Timing mattered: Rapid shifts in AI and L&D created urgency to accelerate product development and customer validation. Investor confidence was driven by team strength, with founders who are operators, domain experts, and AI specialists. Early momentum (30 customers across regions) served as critical proof of market pull and early product‑market fit signals. The pre‑seed focus is product, scalability, and co‑design, not aggressive growth. A modern funding discipline that investors expect. Long‑term vision aims to replace the LMS entirely, positioning Blify as the enterprise learning layer embedded in daily workflows. Learn more about funding in HR and WorkTech at https://1worktech.com Learn more about Blify at https://blify.co Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    21분
  4. The New Rules of Strategic Workforce Planning: Why Work Tech is Finally Growing Up

    3월 3일

    The New Rules of Strategic Workforce Planning: Why Work Tech is Finally Growing Up

    In this episode, George LaRocque breaks down why 2026 marks a turning point for Work Tech, driven by architectural rigor, agentic AI, and a shift away from generic wrappers toward real business value. He explores the evolution of strategic workforce planning, the rise of autonomous agents as part of workforce capacity, and the escalating risks tied to agent complexity. George also outlines the four categories of high‑conviction innovation WorkTech is actively seeking from founders and investors. In this episode we look at workforce planning, agentic AI, HR Tech innovation, WorkTech trends, skills intelligence, autonomous agents, and the future of work. Key Takeaways Strategic workforce planning is shifting from aspiration to execution, powered by agentic AI and predictive workforce intelligence. Autonomous agents are now part of workforce capacity, requiring new models for skills, tasks, and output planning. Architectural rigor is the new market standard, replacing the experimental AI phase with measurable business value. Agent complexity introduces new risks, especially one‑to‑many agent connections that create compliance and security liabilities. Investors are demanding verticalized agentic models, business connective tissue, voice agent innovation, and global payroll infrastructure. The flight to quality is accelerating, rewarding founders who solve well‑defined problems with clear ICPs and scalable architectures. Get more insights on these topics and more at 1worktech.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    15분
  5. Up Next @ WorkTech: Reverse Recruiting, Risky Agents, and the Rise of AI Native HR Tech

    2월 27일

    Up Next @ WorkTech: Reverse Recruiting, Risky Agents, and the Rise of AI Native HR Tech

    A fast-moving conversation on AI‑driven promotions, frontline automation, agent security risks, reverse recruiting, and the funding wave reshaping HR Tech in 2026. In this episode, George and Kate unpack how AI is reshaping work—from Accenture tying promotions to AI usage (“use of our key tools will be a visible input to talent discussions.”) to Burger King’s voice agent Patty tracking upsells and friendliness scores. They explore Google’s internal AI push, the security risks of OpenClaw (“30,000 compromised installations”), and the rise of “AI native” as 2026’s dominant narrative. The conversation closes with reverse recruiting, new funding rounds, and emerging HR Tech trends. In this episode, George and Kate look at AI adoption, HR technology, agentic AI, workforce automation, recruiting technology, future of work trends, HR Tech funding. Key Takeaways: AI‑Driven Performance Management: Accenture’s plan to tie promotions to AI usage raises questions about leadership, culture, and the future of performance metrics. Frontline Automation Expands: Burger King’s “Patty” agent shows how voice‑based AI is entering hourly work, tracking upsells, sentiment, and shift performance. AI Ethics & Internal Adoption: Google’s internal AI mandates highlight ongoing tensions between innovation, employee trust, and past AI ethics controversies. Agent Security Risks Grow: OpenClaw’s rapid adoption led to “30,000 compromised installations,” exposing how vulnerable agent ecosystems and marketplaces remain. Reverse Recruiting Surges: Candidates paying for job‑hunting help reveals market vulnerability and the rise of predatory AI‑driven services. HR Tech Funding Accelerates: New capital flows to AI native platforms, cognitive assessments, integrations, and hyper‑local job boards signal where Work Tech innovation is heading. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    47분
  6. Vibe Coding, Agentic AI, and the HR Tech Risk No One Sees Coming

    2월 11일

    Vibe Coding, Agentic AI, and the HR Tech Risk No One Sees Coming

    In this episode, George LaRocque unpacks new data from the 2025 Global WorkTech Report, revealing why investment capital continues to rise even as deal volume declines. He explains the “squeezed middle” dynamic affecting growth‑stage vendors, the surge in early‑stage AI innovation, and the strategic bets shaping the market. George also breaks down the hype and hidden risks of vibe coding and warns HR leaders about the escalating legal exposure tied to AI explainability and transparency. In this episode we look at workforce intelligence, agentic AI, HR technology, WorkTech investment trends, CHRO strategy, AI governance, future of work. Key Takeaways Global WorkTech investment rose to $6.24B in 2025, even as deal volume fell 16%, signaling a shift toward high‑conviction, AI‑forward bets. Early‑stage innovation is surging, with 136 pre‑seed, seed, and Series A deals capturing $1.1B in capital. The “squeezed middle” is real, as growth‑stage vendors struggle to raise amid investor discipline and platform consolidation. Agentic AI and workforce intelligence are top acquisition targets, replacing standalone tools with infrastructure‑level capabilities. Vibe coding creates false confidence, delivering prototypes but failing to meet enterprise‑grade HR tech requirements at scale. AI explainability is now a legal tail risk, with black‑box systems threatening vendor valuations, enterprise adoption, and regulatory compliance. Get the report and "Vibe Coding vs the CHRO" at 1worktech.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    21분
  7. AI Turbulence, Workday Shakeups, Vibe Coding Hype, and the Future of HR Tech

    2월 10일

    AI Turbulence, Workday Shakeups, Vibe Coding Hype, and the Future of HR Tech

    In this episode, George and Kate unpack a turbulent week across Work Tech, starting with Workday’s CEO transition and workforce reductions, which arrive just ahead of its earnings call . They explore the hype and hazards of vibe coding, including security breaches and enterprise‑scale limitations . The conversation shifts to DEI transparency as Fortune 500 participation in the Corporate Equality Index drops sharply, raising concerns for employees navigating unclear policies . Key Takeaways: Workday’s CEO transition signals deeper strategic and market pressures, including stock performance concerns and upcoming earnings uncertainty . Vibe coding is accelerating but remains risky, lacking compliance, scalability, and security—highlighted by real‑world agentic breaches and enterprise pushback . AI adoption is shifting from “build” to “buy,” with enterprises rapidly increasing investment in secure, scalable HR Tech and Work Tech platforms . DEI transparency is declining, as Fortune 500 participation in the Corporate Equality Index drops 65%, creating uncertainty for employees seeking clarity on inclusion policies . HR’s role is transforming, requiring new skills to manage AI agents, troubleshoot automated workflows, and orchestrate hybrid human‑machine teams . Early‑stage HR Tech funding remains active, while mid‑stage companies face pressure, leading to acquisitions like Wellfound’s purchase of Higherfly . Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    44분

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The WorkTech Podcast explores the critical trends shaping the future of work and HR tech. George LaRocque of WorkTech, drawing from years of advising top innovators, investors, and enterprises, guides you through market deals, issues, opportunities, and trends—all through a strategic, actionable lens.

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