The New Face of Human Resources There's no better chance to bridge the gap between how the HR Department perceives itself and how others perceive them than the pandemic and its aftermath. The COVID-19 situation has clicked a reset button. Hence changing the way and the world we lived in before COVID-19. There's a new world order now, which requires a shift in mindset, thinking, and execution. Organizations that insist on living the same norms as before the pandemic are heading full speed toward a considerable challenge, especially with the wave of the Great Resignation. Back to People For years, human-resource executives have been on a cost-cutting treadmill, using analytics and big data to existing HR operating models. Their mandate has been to optimize labor costs, strengthen compliance using standardized metrics, and assist in adopting technology outside IT, which has been a worthy but uninspiring objective for their departments. The focus has been on productivity and how to evaluate it, even in HR areas that have been traditionally filled with meaning and cultural significance—recruitment and learning, and development. The challenge now for chief human-resource officers (CHROs) is whether routines have replaced the creativity and innovation required to attract and develop talent, manage and reward performance, and optimize workforce strategy. During recent interviews with more than 70 CHROs by Mckinsey from some of Europe's top enterprises, this need for more people-centric policies came through loud and clear.1 Focusing on Well-being and Support According to Bryan Hancock, a partner and global leader of McKinsey & Co.'s talent management group, HR professionals have traditionally cared for employees' physical and mental health, but now they're taking a more proactive approach. This entails taking note of how people are feeling as well as building abilities for detecting and assisting with problems early on. According to Holly Maurer-Klein, SHRM-SCP, a vice president of HR/Advantage Advisory in Pittsburgh, doing so needs HR to display more emotional intelligence.