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The ‘silver tsunami’: How HR can turn it into an advantage

June 11, 2026
in Human Resources
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The ‘silver tsunami’: How HR can turn it into an advantage
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Singapore’s workforce is being pulled in two directions at once. On one side, an aging population is quietly shrinking the active labor pool—more than 1 in 5 citizens is now aged 65 or above, a number set to reach 1 in 4 by 2030, and the country officially joins the ranks of “super-aged” societies this year.

On the other hand, AI is compressing the time organizations have to adapt, with 9 in 10 organizations globally already reporting that it is transforming how work gets done. Together, these forces are making one thing clear: The old model of workforce management—stable roles, predictable headcount, linear careers—is no longer equal to the moment.

Rebecca Adams has been watching these shifts converge for some time. As Chief People Officer and Chief of Staff to the CEO at Cohesity, she has developed a clear point of view: The organizations that will navigate this moment are those willing to abandon the old logic of how work gets done.

“High performance used to be defined by stability, fixed roles, predictable headcount and clear hierarchies,” Adams says. “Today, it’s defined by speed, adaptability, and clarity of outcomes.”

See also: Why empathy isn’t over: ‘Ignore it at your peril,’ CHRO warns

The practical implication is a move away from role-first thinking toward skills and outcomes-first design. At Cohesity, that means hiring for capability and learning velocity rather than tenure. “A growth mindset and critical thinking are imperative,” Adams says. “Roles evolve quickly, and we need people who can evolve with the business.”

It is an approach increasingly reflected across the industry. Data from the PwC Global AI Jobs Barometer reveals that formal requirements for AI-exposed roles have already dropped from 66% to 59% in the past year alone, as employers prioritize demonstrated adaptability over credentials.

Trust by design, not by default

As fractional and distributed work gains traction in Singapore—with the government’s own careers platforms now actively profiling fractional roles as a mainstream option—the question of how to maintain accountability without resorting to surveillance has become pressing. Adams is direct about the misconception she encounters most: “One of the biggest mistakes is thinking that distributed work requires less accountability. In reality, it requires more discipline.”

At Cohesity, the response has been to make expectations, communication norms and shared responsibility explicit, while deliberately defaulting to trust rather than monitoring. Team-level patterns inform manager conversations; individual surveillance does not. “Trust is deeply human,” Adams says. “It’s built through consistency, fairness and follow-through. In a distributed environment, trust also has to be reinforced by design, with clear expectations, transparent communication and metrics that prioritize outcomes over visibility.”

The silver tsunami is not a crisis—if you redesign for it

Rebecca Adams, CPO of Cohesity

The anxiety around Singapore’s aging workforce is understandable, but Adams thinks it is rooted in a flawed promise. “It’s only a crisis if one assumes careers are linear and finite,” she says. “When you design for multistage careers, the so-called ‘silver tsunami’ becomes a strategic advantage.”

Experienced employees bring traits that cannot be quickly acquired: judgment, contextual perspective and the kind of stability that becomes more valuable as business complexity increases. The challenge for people leaders is to redesign work structures so seasoned professionals can continue contributing in ways aligned to their current life stage, rather than forcing a binary choice between full-time employment and full exit. Fractional arrangements, phased transitions and advisory roles are among the models gaining traction as organizations begin to treat experience as an asset to be redeployed rather than phased out.

The intergenerational dividend is a further argument for this approach. Early-career employees who learn alongside seasoned colleagues gain access to tacit knowledge that no onboarding programme can replicate. At Cohesity, mentoring and internal mobility are the primary mechanisms for making this happen. “When organizations combine internal mobility with continuous learning,” Adams says, “they create circular ecosystems where employees can reskill, re-enter and re-engage over time. In that model, experience compounds value.”

Keeping culture coherent

Underpinning all of this is a more fundamental challenge: How does an organization stay coherent—in identity and institutional memory—as its structure, headcount and working arrangements shift constantly? For Adams, the answer begins with a clear-eyed rejection of culture as decoration. “Culture only works if employees feel it in everyday decisions and situations,” she says.

At Cohesity, values and behaviors are made operational, embedded into leadership expectations, performance conversations and recognition practices, rather than left as aspirational statements. Equally important is ensuring that knowledge lives in systems, not just in individuals. Strong onboarding, searchable internal knowledge bases and consistent listening mechanisms are the infrastructure through which institutional memory—the context behind decisions, the lessons learned, the narratives that shape how the organization operates—is preserved and transferred as teams change. “When values, behaviors and knowledge are intentionally reinforced,” Adams concludes, “the organization stays cohesive, even as the ways we work continue to evolve.”


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