Atomic Note

The default future for people analytics is quiet dismemberment

business strategydata democratizationcommoditizationpower dynamicstalent intelligenceworkforce planning

Not death. Not rebirth. The pieces get handed out while the field argues about names. The high-value work already has owners, and they aren't HR. FP&A holds the purse and is running headcount as a live, driver-based model wired into the HRIS. In high-volume industries, Operations built workforce planning before HR noticed it existed. Talent intelligence floats up and out to strategy functions or specialized vendors.

What's left of "people analytics" is the harmless commodity layer - descriptive reporting spread thin across HR, assisted by a chatbot and a platform. Nothing dies. It just gets divided, and the part that mattered is the part that goes.

Two things are happening at once, and only one is a problem. Commoditization at the bottom is fine - when every HRBP can self-serve an answer from the data lake, that's maturity, not loss. The problem is the top. Conversational BI that commoditizes the bottom also erodes the translation work HR banked on. Leaders can now self-serve the answer. Finance can pull people data without asking permission. The function that already speaks P&L is standing closer to the prize.

Talent intelligence
floats up and out to strategy / specialized vendors
Productive capacity modeling
Finance (already running driver-based headcount)
Agent and throughput measurement
Engineering and Ops
Commodity descriptive layer
HRBP chatbot + platform

Source claim: The most likely outcome for people analytics is not death or rebirth but quiet dismemberment, with Finance taking capacity work, Ops taking throughput measurement, and a commodity layer staying in HR.