
Equip your team with the right mindset and tools to not just manage change – but navigate it confidently.
Only 55% are comfortable deploying robotics in customer service environments. Acceptance is lower still in maintenance (63%) and medical procedures (51%), highlighting that confidence in automation is not uniform across the organisation.
Those discrepancies expose key challenges for HR leaders. Employee perceptions of safety, ethical deployment, and role displacement risks differ dramatically depending on the task and team affected. There’s a need for tailored communication, scenario planning, and values-based leadership at every stage of robotics integration.
Notably, 29% of respondents reported having already experienced a robotics-related safety incident. A further 58% raised concerns about the cybersecurity risks that come with deploying automated systems into core business operations.
Then, of course, there’s the strange case of the Korean robot that “killed” itself by jumping down a flight of stairs. It seems you might even have to throw robot welfare into the mix. Although, that should probably be in the remit of the IT department.
Confidence in the use of robotics is not just a technical issue but a cultural one and HR plays a critical role in bridging any gap between the two.
“Trust is fragile and can easily be broken if robotics are built and deployed without the necessary foundational software to make them performant, safe, secure and reliable,” said Jim Hirsch, Vice President of General Embedded Markets at QNX.
Confidence in robotics is not just a technical issue but a cultural one and HR will have to play a role in bridging the two.
If the unremitting rise of AI technology is anything of a yardstick, then the introduction of artificially intelligent robots into the workplace seems somewhat inevitable.
According to the QNX report, 90% of executives say that technological advancements are pushing robotics into the mainstream, with 86% citing improved safety features as a key factor.
But while engineering teams may be building the machines, it is HR departments that must help ensure the workforce evolves alongside them. One of the most pressing findings from the report is that 92% of respondents believe employees must be involved in robotics planning.
Automation is no longer a back-office project managed in isolation by operations or IT. It is now a workforce transformation initiative, requiring cross-functional ownership and a people-first approach.
It will require open engagement with staff about what robotics means for their roles, investment in new training pathways, and clear policies for deployment ethics, risk mitigation and accountability. Especially important given the differences in how automation is perceived across departments.
The lessons of artificial intelligence - where poor communication and unclear outcomes have sometimes led to pushback - are particularly relevant. Robotics presents similar challenges, with the added dimension of physical risk and proximity to workers. Proactive planning and transparency are critical.
For chief human resources officers, the challenge is to avoid a narrow focus on technical outcomes and also consider how robotics affects organisational culture, workforce identity, and long-term skills strategy. Automation is not just about efficiency, it’s about rethinking how work is done and who does it.
As its use becomes more widespread, business leaders are being urged to ensure that ethical deployment, employee trust and workforce preparedness are all central to their strategy.
The future has already arrived, but while robotics may promise significant gains in productivity and risk management, those gains will only be realised if the human side of the equation is also prioritized.