Barry Phillips (CEO) BEM founded Legal Island in 1998. Since then, the company has become the leading workplace compliance training company in the island of Ireland. He was awarded a British Empire Medal in the New Year’s Honours List 2020 for services to employment and equality.
Barry is a qualified barrister, coach and meditator and a regular speaker both here and abroad. He also volunteers as mentor to aspiring law students on the Migrant Leaders Programme.
Barry is an author, releasing his latest book titled 'Mastering Small Business Employee Engagement: 30 Quick Wins & HR Hacks from an IIP Platinum Employer' in 2020 along with Legal Island MD Jayne Gallagher.
Barry has worked at the European Parliament, the European Court of Human Rights and the International Labour Organisation in Geneva before qualifying as a lawyer in 1993.
He has travelled extensively and lived in a total of eight different countries considering himself to be a global citizen first, a European second and British/Irish citizen last of all. His guiding mantra in life is “Never react but respond. Get curious not furious.”
Barry is an Ironman and lists Russian language and wild camping as his favourite pastimes.
This week Barry Phillips revisits his top five GenAI tools for HR and notes some new contenders for the top spot.
Transcript:
Hello Humans!
And welcome to the weekly podcast that aims to summarise an important AI development for HR in around five minutes. My name is Barry Phillips
Today’s we’re looking at the top five GenAI tools for HR.
Now, let’s be honest. HR teams are being bombarded with AI tools. Every second product now claims to be “AI-powered”, “revolutionary”, or “game-changing”. But only a few are genuinely useful.
So today, I’m revisting my top five tools that HR professionals should have on their desktops or at least their radar.
At number five: Scribe.
Scribe is a tool for creating process documentation. In plain English, it captures what you do on screen and turns it into a step-by-step guide, with screenshots and written instructions.
For HR, that is more useful than it sounds. Think onboarding checklists, how-to guides for HR systems, instructions for managers completing forms, payroll processes, recruitment workflows, or explaining how to log sickness absence properly.
But there’s a catch. Process documentation is only useful if the process itself is good. If your HR process is clunky, confusing or full of unnecessary steps, Scribe won’t fix it. It will just document the chaos beautifully. Which, to be fair, may still be a useful wake-up call.
At number four: Synthesia.
This is one for HR teams doing learning and development, onboarding, compliance training, or internal communications. Synthesia lets you create AI-generated avatars without needing cameras, studios, actors, or the dreaded phrase, “Can everyone come into the office for filming next Tuesday?”
Think about the HR use cases. A welcome video for new employees. A short refresher on dignity at work. A manager guide to handling absence conversations. A compliance update that doesn’t look like it was made in 2009 using clip art and fear.
But again, don’t get carried away. AI avatars are useful, but they’re not warmth. They’re not culture. And they’re definitely not a replacement for human leadership. Use them for repeatable information, not emotional moments.
At number three: NotebookLM.
For me, this is one of the most interesting tools for HR because it works from your own sources. You can upload documents, policies, reports, research papers, meeting notes, or guidance, and then have the content re-presented in any one of nine formats including a mind map a quiz a podcast or a slide deck.
But the golden rule is this: source quality in, source quality out. If your policy is vague, outdated, or contradictory, AI won’t magically make it good. It may just help you discover how messy it really is. Which, frankly, is still useful.
At number two: Wispr.AI, particularly Wispr Flow.
This is voice-to-text with a GenAI twist. Instead of typing everything, you speak naturally and the tool turns that into cleaner written text.
For HR people, this could be a serious time saver. Think post-meeting notes, reflections after an employee relations conversation, first drafts of emails, quick policy thoughts, training ideas, or debriefs after a workshop.
And does it work? Many of us still remember Dragon the first version of speech to text software which was clever and fun to play with but next to useless. It captured 70% of what you said but the 30% that had to be rectified rendered the whole exercise futile. Yes it does work. We tested it on my accent, a Ballymena one and a Cork one to really test it and it showed 99% accuracy.
And finally, at number one: ChatGPT and Claude.
I’m grouping these together because, for most HR teams, they sit in the same category: general-purpose AI assistants. They can help draft, challenge, summarise, reframe, brainstorm, role-play, compare options, and improve communication.
Use them to prepare for difficult conversations. Use them to create manager checklists. Use them to translate legalistic HR wording into plain English. Use them to build training activities, improve survey questions, review job adverts, or generate policy FAQs.
But don’t treat them like oracles. Treat them like very capable assistants who are confident, fast, occasionally brilliant, and sometimes completely wrong with a straight face.
The best HR users of ChatGPT and Claude won’t be the ones who type, “Write me a policy.” They’ll be the ones who give context, set boundaries, ask for alternatives, challenge the answer, and check the output carefully.
So there you have it: Scribe, Synthesia, NotebookLM, Wispr.AI, and ChatGPT with Claude.
The real point is not that HR needs more tools. HR needs better workflows. GenAI should not be bolted on like a shiny toy. It should remove friction, improve clarity, save time, and help HR professionals spend less energy producing documents and more energy doing the human work that actually matters.
That’s it for this week. As always thank you for listening. See you next week.