As AI systems increasingly become an arbiter of talent acquisition, human connections become more valuable—not less.
Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping the landscape of work, creating both disruption and opportunity. And as employers adopt AI not just for productivity, but for talent acquisition, the hiring process itself is undergoing a profound transformation.
In some cases, AI is now serving as an “algorithmic gatekeeper,” screening resumes, ranking candidates and determining who advances in the hiring process. While these systems promise efficiency, they also risk further obscuring the pathways into opportunity—particularly for those without conventional career experience or personal connections to begin with.
Herein lies the paradox: as AI systems increasingly become the arbiter of candidate advancement, the human connection becomes more valuable—not less.
Networks and relationships have always mattered in the job market. Referrals open doors; mentors provide guidance; and informal networks often surface opportunities that never make it to public job postings. In an AI-mediated hiring landscape, where initial access may be filtered through opaque systems, these human connections are becoming even more essential.
That reality has profound implications for education.
Connections are not a “nice to have;” they are a core component of economic mobility. Just as we must equip students with the skills to navigate an AI-impacted labor market, we must also ensure that every student learns how to develop, nurture and leverage social capital as a core part of their educational experience.
This work cannot begin in college or even in high school. It must start much earlier.
As I’ve written previously, middle school is increasingly the starting line for career exploration. This is a critical window when students begin forming aspirations, developing identities and imagining their futures. It is also when inequities in exposure begin to compound.
Introducing students to a range of careers is important. But equally important is helping them begin to understand how people access those careers—through relationships, networks and real-world experiences. Early exposure to professionals, even in informal settings, can demystify pathways and begin to build the foundation of social capital.
Technology is also transforming how students receive the guidance and support they need to navigate toward their futures. AI-powered tools can now provide personalized recommendations on courses, careers and postsecondary pathways. These innovations hold promise, particularly in systems where counselors are stretched thin.
But guidance without human connection is insufficient.
Research from the Christensen Institute underscores the importance of pairing navigational guidance with relationships—trusted adults and mentors who can help students interpret information, build confidence and take action. Information can point students in the right direction, but relationships help them move forward.
In an AI-rich environment, the role of educators and advisors evolves. They are not just providers of information; they are connectors, coaches and advocates. They help students translate aspirations into networks and opportunities.
One of the challenges in building social capital is that it is often invisible. Students may not recognize the networks they already have, nor understand how to expand them strategically.
Schools can play a critical role by making this process explicit. Students can be coached to identify who is currently in their networks—family members, teachers, community members—and consider other contacts who might help them reach their goals. From there, they can develop concrete steps to build and leverage those connections.
This is not about teaching networking as a transactional skill. It is about helping students understand relationships as a replenishable and reciprocal source of learning, support and opportunity. It is about building confidence in reaching out, asking questions and sustaining connections over time.
Importantly, this kind of coaching must be intentional and universal. Left to chance, students who already know how to leverage their social capital will continue to accumulate more and use it to their advantage, while their less-experienced peers risk missing out on critical opportunities that might only be accessed through relationships.
Work-based learning offers one of the most powerful mechanisms for building social capital.
Lighter-touch experiences, like those through project-based learning and job shadowing, as well as deeper experiences like internships and apprenticeships do more than develop skills; they connect students to real people in real workplaces. These experiences create relationships that can lead to mentorship, references and future opportunities.
Yet access to high-quality work-based learning remains uneven. Too often, these opportunities are limited to students who already have such advantages as flexible schedules, transportation or pre-existing personal connections.
Expanding access must be a priority. This means not only increasing the number of opportunities, but also ensuring that they are intentionally structured to maximize relationship-building and include explicit social capital outcomes. Students should not just complete tasks; they should engage with professionals, receive feedback and build lasting connections.
The rise of AI is prompting necessary conversations about what students need to know and be able to do in a rapidly changing economy. But skills alone will not determine who succeeds.
In an era where algorithms increasingly mediate access to opportunity, human relationships become a critical counterbalance. They provide context, trust and pathways that technology alone cannot replicate.
Education systems must respond accordingly. Building social capital should be as intentional as building academic knowledge. It should be embedded in curriculum, advising and experiential learning—not treated as an add-on.
The future of work may be shaped by machines. But the future of opportunity will still be shaped by people.
And ensuring that every student has access to those people—and knows how to connect with them—may be one of the most important economic imperatives we have.