First off.. congrats! You’ve made it through years of study, applications, interviews, and now you're stepping into the workforce.
But the workforce you’re entering is nothing like the one you were trained for by your professors.
AI has moved from assistants to autonomous agents to full agent teams. These systems don’t just support work, they perform it. Across tools, across tasks, with minimal human input.
Most graduates aren’t being prepared for this.
They’re stepping into workflows run by AI agents that make decisions, coordinate execution, and move faster than most onboarding programs acknowledge.
It’s not your fault you’re unprepared. It’s no one’s really.
But if we don’t prepare graduates to manage agents—and reset how we onboard and develop them—the responsibility will fall on HR, L&D, and every leader accountable for workforce readiness.
Most onboarding still assumes:
But work today is structured by tasks and skills, not job titles.
What the data shows: Microsoft research confirms AI agents are already performing complex, high-impact tasks across organizations. Yet new hires are still met with outdated materials: job descriptions, generic training, and no guidance on managing autonomous systems.
What’s missing:
New talent needs to be equipped with:
These aren’t advanced skills. They’re the new baseline. Treating AI as an add-on is no longer acceptable.
The problem goes deeper than onboarding. The teams responsible for preparing people—Learning and Development—aren’t ready either.
Current state:
What’s emerging instead:
Until L&D retools around these roles and capabilities, it cannot equip new talent for the realities of AI-powered work. If L&D is still managing content libraries, it won’t help graduates manage agent teams.
Today’s early talent is entering a workforce shaped by systems, not roles. Onboarding must evolve to reflect that. It’s no longer just about helping them “settle in.” It’s about equipping them to operate, audit, and lead in AI-integrated environments from day one.
Effective onboarding must now:
L&D must design onboarding as a living system, not a one-time event—connecting learning, automation, and performance in real time. Until that happens, new talent will continue walking into complexity unprepared.
Failing to redesign onboarding means:
This isn’t a tooling issue. It’s a talent issue.
If we expect graduates to lead in agent-powered systems, we must lead the transformation of how they’re prepared. That responsibility sits squarely with leadership, HR, and L&D.
We can’t keep preparing people for outdated work structures and expect them to thrive.
The work has changed.
Graduates know it.
Now leadership must act like it.
Siobhan 💜