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‘CHROs are now architects of organizational transformation, and not just talent managers’ : Gaurav Singh, CHRO, Centricity WealthTech

‘CHROs are now architects of organizational transformation, and not just talent managers’ : Gaurav Singh, CHRO, Centricity WealthTech

CHROs are today sitting at the intersection of technology, culture, and business strategy. In an exclusive conversation Gaurav Singh, CHRO, Centricity WealthTech tells Bhavya Bagga, Business Reporter, CXO Media that with the advent of AI the key shift has been from reactive HR to more predictive, proactive people strategy.

Que. As CHRO in a fast-growing wealthtech company, what is the biggest talent challenge fintech firms in India are facing in 2026?

Ans. The most pressing challenge is the acute scarcity of hybrid talent professionals who combine deep financial domain expertise with strong technical fluency. We are competing not just with other fintechs, but with global tech giants and consulting firms for the same talent pool. 

The second challenge is retention in a market where poaching has become aggressive. Candidates today want more than compensation; they seek purposeful work, rapid learning curves, wealth creation for partners and organizations that invest in their AI upskilling. The talent war has shifted from “hiring the best” to “building the best.”

Que. With AI transforming workplaces, do you think the role of CHROs is becoming more strategic than ever? How are you preparing teams for this shift?

Ans. Absolutely. CHROs are now architects of organizational transformation, not just talent managers. We are sitting at the intersection of technology, culture, and business strategy. 

My focus is threefold: First, creating AI fluency programs where every employee from operations to sales understands how to work alongside AI tools. 

Second, redesigning roles to be more strategic as AI handles routine tasks, which means reskilling programs are continuous, not episodic. 

Third, fostering psychological safety so teams embrace AI as an enabler, not a threat. The CHRO’s mandate now includes being the chief learning officer and change catalyst.

Que. India’s wealthtech space is evolving rapidly. What talent trends are shaping the next generation of fintech companies?

Ans. Three trends stand out: First, the rise of product minded engineers who understand customer pain points, not just code. 

Second, demand for behavioral scientists and UX researchers who can translate complex financial products into intuitive experiences especially for India’s diverse, digitally maturing customer base. 

Third, the emergence of AI ethics and governance roles as regulatory scrutiny intensifies. 

We are also seeing a democratization of fintech careers talent from non-metro cities bringing local market insights that Bangalore or Mumbai professionals might miss. Geographic diversity is becoming a competitive advantage.

Que. How is generative AI changing the way companies hire, train, and retain talent?

Ans. GenAI has compressed hiring cycles dramatically. We use AI to screen resumes, conduct preliminary assessments, and even simulate job scenarios but the final decision remains deeply human. For training, AI powered personalized learning paths adapt in real-time to each employee’s pace and gaps, making upskilling scalable. Retention has become more nuanced: AI analyzes sentiment from feedback, spot patterns in attrition risk, and helps us have proactive career conversations before an employee even thinks of leaving. 

The key shift is from reactive HR to predictive, proactive people strategy. However, we are careful not to let algorithms override human judgment on culture fit and values alignment.

Que. Do you believe firms like Centricity that embed AI deeply into customer and employee experiences will have a stronger competitive advantage in the next five years?

Ans. Without question. Companies that treat AI as a bolt on tool will struggle; those that weave it into their DNA will lead. When AI enhances both customer-facing experiences like hyper personalized wealth recommendations and internal operations like intelligent onboarding or real-time performance insights you create a compounding advantage. 

Employees become more productive, customers get better outcomes, and the organization learns faster. The competitive moat is not just the AI itself; it is the organizational muscle memory of continuously learning, adapting, and innovating with AI. Firms that build this culture now will be nearly impossible to catch by 2030.

Que. Should AI literacy become a mandatory leadership competency for CXOs, including HR leaders, in today’s business environment?

Ans. Yes, and it is non-negotiable. CXOs do not need to code, but they must understand AI’s capabilities, limitations, and ethical implications to make informed strategic decisions. For CHROs specifically, AI literacy means knowing how algorithms can introduce bias in hiring, how to audit AI tools for fairness, and how to balance efficiency with empathy. Leaders who dismiss AI as “just a tech issue” will find themselves obsolete. 

AI literacy is not about becoming a technologist; it is about staying relevant as a leader in an AI first world.

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