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As artificial intelligence reshapes the workplace while organizations face mounting pressure to operate more efficiently, HR leaders are rethinking the capabilities their teams need to succeed. LinkedIn’s latest Skills on the Rise report for HR professionals offers a snapshot of that transformation, highlighting the 10 fastest-growing skills HR practitioners are developing to remain competitive and strategic in today’s evolving world of work.
The ranking, based on year-over-year growth in both skill acquisition and hiring success among LinkedIn users between 2024 and 2025, underscores a profession balancing technological fluency with people-centered leadership. While AI-related expertise continues to surge across industries, the report also points to the enduring importance of communication, culture, and change management.
Employment law and compliance claimed the top spot on the list, reflecting heightened employer concern around legal risk, workplace investigations, and evolving regulations.
“I’m hearing from employers that they want HR pros to be savvy in labor laws and employee relations issues,” said Laura Mazzullo, founder and CEO of East Side Staffing, a New York City-based recruiting firm focused on the placement of HR professionals. “It seems to be more important than 5 or 10 years ago. It’s a cost savings to not have to go to outside counsel.”
Mazzullo added that concerns around AI adoption may be reinforcing the emphasis on legal and compliance expertise. Employers increasingly expect HR professionals to understand both compliance requirements and the operational aspects of AI-enabled work tech, she said.
AI literacy ranked second on LinkedIn’s HR skills list, followed by operational efficiency, data analytics, and end-to-end recruiting.
Teuila Hanson, chief people officer at LinkedIn, said the prominence of AI literacy reflects a fundamental shift in how HR work is performed.
“AI literacy is now a core HR skill,” Hanson said. “Not surprising, but it tells you everything about where we are. If you’re using AI to review candidates or support employees, you need to understand how to engineer prompts that amplify what’s human, not replace it.”
On LinkedIn’s broader Skills on the Rise list across all professions, AI engineering and implementation ranked first, while AI business strategy came in third. Yet soft skills continue to hold significant value. Executive and shareholder communications ranked fourth overall, and leadership and people management skills placed sixth.
For HR leaders, the findings suggest that the future of the profession lies in blending technical capability with strategic influence.
Operational efficiency, ranked fourth on LinkedIn’s HR skills list, also reflects growing pressure for HR teams to do more with fewer resources. Employers are increasingly looking for HR professionals who can streamline workflows, leverage HR technology, and use analytics to drive better business outcomes.
“This is a major trend,” Mazzullo said. “Investing in the right HR technology so that HR can be focused more on proactive, strategic, forward-thinking work.”
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