AI for Human Resources
Chris Klaus
Senior AI Architect, Chalice AI
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Employee-facing AI supports:
Explaining policies
Guiding onboarding steps
Surfacing learning resources
Supporting career exploration
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Career questions carry especial weight
| Topic | Risk if poorly handled |
|---|---|
| Growth | False expectations |
| Promotion readiness | Confusion about criteria |
| Compensation | Frustration or distrust |
| Performance feedback | Damaged confidence |
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The agent CAN help employees:
Explore skills to develop
Understand common career paths
Identify learning opportunities
Frame development goals
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Acts as a thinking partner 🧠
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The agent CANNOT:
Recommend specific promotions
Provide compensation advice
Interpret performance evaluations
Replace manager conversations
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These require human judgment 👤
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Escalation
Know when to stop and redirect
Questions with exceptions → human conversation
Protects employees from misunderstanding
Protects HR from unintended commitments
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Consistency
Predictable responses build trust
Neutral, non-evaluative language
Clear boundaries protect everyone
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Trust comes from design choices, not model advancement
Clear boundaries 🔒 Predictable responses using neutral, non-evaluative language
Transparent escalation → 👥 Clearly redirect to HR when human judgment is required
Human accountability ✅ Visible pathways to human decision-makers

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Employee-facing agents can:
Extend HR support without replacing HR responsibility
Help employees think, reflect, and prepare
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They should NOT:
Evaluate outcomes
Make commitments
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When designed thoughtfully, agents can scale access while preserving trust
AI for Human Resources