“To future-proof yourself in an AI-driven world, you must strengthen the one thing machines can’t replicate—human empathy.” — Christine Buscarino, Global COO & CMO, Dale Carnegie
Artificial intelligence is reshaping the world at a pace few expected. It’s upending industries, rewriting job descriptions, shifting how people communicate, and redefining which skills truly matter. But while AI accelerates knowledge work, one truth has only grown more urgent:
Human connection is still the most powerful differentiator.
Few organizations understand this better than Dale Carnegie, the legendary global training company rooted in principles that have guided leaders for over a century.
In this episode of The Speed of Culture, Christine Buscarino—Global Chief Operating Officer and Chief Marketing Officer—joins Matt Britton to discuss the future of leadership, the rise of cross-generational workplaces, why soft skills matter more than ever, and how Dale Carnegie is helping individuals and organizations thrive amid AI disruption.
Tune into the latest episode or read the transcript below to learn more. Here are some top takeaways:
Dale Carnegie: The Global Training Powerhouse Built on Timeless Principles
Founded on the teachings of How to Win Friends and Influence People, Dale Carnegie has spent more than 100 years helping individuals strengthen the skills that drive human performance:
- Communication
- Leadership
- Empathy
- Trust
- Resilience
- Influence
Today, the organization operates in 80+ countries, delivering training in person, virtually, and through one-on-one coaching. Despite evolving technologies and a transformed workplace, Dale Carnegie’s core message remains unchanged:
People skills are the foundation of effective leadership—and they’re more essential now than ever.
Cross-Generational Workplaces: What Today’s Leaders Miss
Workforces today are a confluence of four generations—Baby Boomers, Gen X, Millennials, and now Gen Z—working together in hybrid settings with very different expectations.
Christine highlights key differences:
1. Gen Z wants purpose, impact, and relationships
This generation isn’t just working for a paycheck—they want to influence outcomes, feel valued, and contribute meaningfully.
2. Younger employees have unlimited options
Remote and hybrid work broaden opportunities beyond geography, raising expectations for culture and leadership.
3. Middle managers are under pressure
They must deliver results and build relationships—something many were never trained to do.
4. Empathy is now a leadership requirement
Where older generations prioritized results first, today’s workforce expects human connection, recognition, and psychological safety.
Christine puts it simply:
“Cultures that prioritize people will deliver stronger results.”
Virtual Work, Lost Social Skills & How to Rebuild Human Connection
COVID reshaped how young people interact. Many entered the workforce without years of in-person social practice.
Christine sees the impact firsthand:
- Difficulty with eye contact
- Discomfort in live conversations
- Overreliance on screens
- Challenges forming trust
- Shortened attention spans
But she believes organizations can fix this—through intentional training in communication, presentation, and interpersonal skills.
Whether virtual or in person, the foundations remain:
- Concise storytelling
- Emotional relevance
- Clear structure
- Meaningful engagement
- Looking directly at the camera when presenting
- Recognizing people by name—something Christine calls a tiny but powerful trust builder
These timeless techniques not only strengthen individuals—they strengthen teams.
Public Speaking: The Skill AI Will Never Replace
In an era of automation and virtual meetings, public speaking has become more important, not less.
Christine explains that great presenters succeed because they:
- Inspire emotionally
- Communicate with conviction
- Earn trust
- Persuade with authenticity
- Bring clarity to complexity
AI can write a script, but it can’t replicate human empathy or the emotional resonance that moves people to action.
For future leaders—especially Gen Z—presentation skills will be a key differentiator in hybrid organizations.
AI Is Reshaping Work—But Soft Skills Will Determine Who Thrives
Christine and Matt discuss their joint initiative, Human by Design, a training program built to help individuals future-proof themselves in an AI-driven world.
Christine notes that AI is:
- Changing how we communicate
- bBlurring lines of authenticity
- Replacing certain jobs
- Increasing fear among employees
- Overwhelming organizations that don’t know where to start
But AI cannot—and will not—replace:
- Empathy
- Trust
- Creativity
- Resilience
- Critical thinking
- Leadership
- Storytelling
These are the competencies Dale Carnegie focuses on strengthening, because they allow individuals to bridge human skills and technological capability.
Christine believes future leaders will need to master both:
“Technology can multiply your productivity tenfold—but people skills will determine whether others trust you enough to follow.”
Companies Need AI Confidence, Not AI Fear
Organizations worldwide are asking the same question:
“How can we adopt AI without damaging culture, trust, or customer relationships?”
Christine explains that leaders want:
- Confidence, not confusion
- Carity on how AI supports—not replaces—human contribution
- Strategies to upskill their teams
- Systems for blending tech with people skills
- Techniques for staying authentic while using AI tools
Employees fear being replaced; leaders fear making the wrong moves.
Training programs that integrate AI literacy and human skills development are quickly becoming essential—not optional.
Christine’s Career: Customer-Centric Leadership Across Industries
Before joining Dale Carnegie, Christine built her career across:
- Office supplies
- Fashion (Adrianna Papell)
- Global marketing
- E-commerce
- Operations
- Leadership
Despite the industry shifts, her north star never changed:
“Know your customer, solve their problems, and build solutions around their needs.”
At Dale Carnegie, she continues to apply that philosophy to expand the organization’s relevance—especially among younger generations entering the workforce.
Her focus today includes:
- Modernizing Dale Carnegie’s global presence
- Building customer-centric marketing systems
- Integrating technology to eliminate busywork
- Creating space for customer relationships and innovation
- Reaching new audiences with updated training formats
Her operational and marketing responsibilities meet at one point:
the client experience.
Her Mantra: “The best way to prepare for tomorrow is to do today’s work superbly well.”
Christine closes with a quote from Dale Carnegie that guides her leadership:
“Prepare for tomorrow by concentrating your intelligence and enthusiasm on today’s work—superbly, day by day.”
It’s a message rooted in accountability, purpose, and continuous self-improvement—principles that remain vital no matter how fast technology evolves.
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