Workforce Planning
The annual planning exercise produces a number: forty-two hires. Where it came from is a spreadsheet that combined last year’s headcount, some managers’ wish lists, and a finance constraint, in a single week, using a snapshot of data that was already stale. Then reality happens. Two teams reorganize, attrition runs hotter in one function than anyone modeled, a critical role sits open for five months, and by Q2 the plan is a historical document that nobody consults but everyone is still nominally following.
The problem is not the forecasting — it is that the inputs go stale the moment the spreadsheet is saved. Skynet keeps them connected to the systems they came from, so the plan can be re-run against what is true today rather than what was true in October.
How it works
Assemble the real picture
Connect your HR system, ATS, and org data. The agent builds the current state: who is where, what is open, what is in flight, what your actual time-to-fill and attrition look like by function rather than in aggregate.
Model the demand
Bring in the plan the business is committed to — the roadmap, the targets, the new market. The agent translates that into the capacity and skills it implies, and shows where today’s team already covers it and where it does not.
Forecast with the gaps named
The agent projects the gap forward, factoring in expected attrition and how long roles in each function actually take to fill. If a role takes five months to close, a Q3 need is a Q1 req. That is the kind of thing spreadsheets quietly miss.
Test the scenarios
Ask what a flat budget does to the roadmap, or what happens if attrition in one function runs at last year’s rate. The agent runs the scenario and shows the tradeoff. It gives you the model, not the decision.
Build it from a prompt
Describe the horizon and the constraints, and re-run it whenever reality moves.
Planning stops being an annual ritual and becomes something you can re-run when the ground moves. The reqs open early enough to matter, the tradeoffs are visible before they become problems, and the conversation with finance happens over a model both sides can inspect rather than two spreadsheets that disagree.