Recently, I was asked to share my insights on talent acquisition trends for 2025.
The talent profession and environment evolved, and if you've been in recruitment as long as I have, you'll recognise that many of today's 'revolutionary' concepts have been quietly developing for years. I've been advocating for some of these transformative changes long before they became industry talking points. My focus has always been on practical, implementable strategies that drive real business value. What's different now is how these elements are converging to create something altogether new, the allocation economy.
Allocation Economy in Talent Acquisition
"The greatest danger in times of turbulence is not the turbulence itself, but to act with yesterday's logic." - Peter Drucker
The knowledge economy - basically what we are used to - centres on gathering and cataloguing information. We are quite good at this, building repositories of talent data and expertise.
But as we move toward 2025+, we can kind of sense that there is a fundamental shift in how value is created.
Satya Nadella, Microsoft's CEO, captured this transformation perfectly: "Every company is now a software company, but more importantly, every company is now a talent company." This observation hints at the emergence of what Dan Shipper of Every (media and software company) calls "the allocation economy."
Why AI Integration and Skills-Based Hiring Are Transforming Talent Environments
We love some data, and it talks:
The World Economic Forum projects 44% of core job skills will shift by 2025
Deloitte's research shows 42% of organisations pivoting to skills-based hiring
LinkedIn's Global Talent Trends reveals a 60% increase in portfolio professionals
McKinsey reports companies with dynamic talent allocation grow revenue 2.2 times faster
Reid Hoffman, LinkedIn's co-founder, wrote: "In the networked age, the best way to become more powerful is to make the networks around you more powerful."
This speaks directly to the power of collective intelligence in modern talent strategies.
The Evolution of Internal Mobility Through AI Agents
The integration of AI agents into talent processes is basically the augmentation of some old, stale processes.
Josh Bersin, a leading industry analyst, observes: "AI doesn't replace jobs, it replaces tasks. And by doing so, it makes many jobs more powerful."
Consider how AI agents are transforming internal mobility:
Pattern Recognition and Opportunity Mapping
AI agents analyse vast amounts of organisational data to identify:
Hidden skill combinations that drive success
Unexpected career progression paths
New ways to deploy existing talent
Predictive Career Development (this got me an innovation award :)
Modern AI systems can:
Forecast skill demand shifts
Suggest personalised learning paths
Identity emerging role opportunities
Creating a Blended Workforce for the Allocation Economy
"The future is already here, it's just not evenly distributed." - William Gibson (fiction writer)
The modern workforce is becoming increasingly fluid, combining:
Traditional full-time employees
Portfolio professionals (freelance, contractors, embedded, RPO, etc.)
AI agents and systems
Specialised contractors
Community networks
Adam Grant: "The mark of a great organisation isn't whether it has problems, but how it faces them."
So the question is how will we be orchestrating all these diverse elements (to be read: how will we allocate them) in order to reach our business goals.
Building Your Allocation Strategy
1. Develop Your Collective Intelligence Network
Start by:
Creating cross-functional knowledge sharing platforms (internal and external of your company)
Establishing communities of practice
Building mentor networks across traditional boundaries
2. Utilise AI Agents
Focus on:
Identifying repetitive tasks suitable for AI automation
Creating human-AI collaboration frameworks + governance
Measuring and optimising AI integration outcomes
3. Implement Skills-Based Hiring Frameworks
Consider:
Developing skill taxonomies
Creating capability-based job architectures
Building skills assessment methodologies
(I still have a hard time getting to terms that after years and years of discourse - we are still nowhere near this).
The Future of Work: Blend! Blending Human and Machine Intelligence
"The real problem is not whether machines think but whether men do." - B.F. Skinner
The allocation economy represents more than a “new way of working”, it's a shift in how we think about value creation. Success in 2025 will depend on how well organisations:
Orchestrate / Allocate their resources - human, technological, and informational
Foster collective intelligence through community and connection
Deploy AI agents to augment human capabilities (and govern them)
Enable fluid movement of talent based on skills and needs
Your Action Plan
(though I hope that you started working on this for a while now)
Begin mapping your organisation's skill landscape
Identify opportunities for AI agent integration
Build your internal talent marketplace
Develop your collective intelligence strategy
"The best way to predict the future is to create it." - Peter Drucker
Conclusion
The allocation economy is the natural evolution of how we think about talent, technology, and value creation. Those who understand this shift and adapt their approach and strategies accordingly, will be best positioned to succeed in 2025 and beyond.
Let's Build Your Allocation Strategy Together
With hands-on experience in internal mobility programmes, skills taxonomies, and talent marketplace development, I help organisations prepare for this evolution in talent strategy. If you'd like to explore how these concepts could work in your organisation, let's talk.
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