Lattice CEO Highlights Humans as Essential ‘Checks and Balances’ for AI

LISBON, PORTUGAL - NOVEMBER 13: Sarah Franklin, CEO, Lattice, delivers remarks while discussing with Lidiane Jones, CEO Bumble, and Danielle Belton, Editor-in-Chief The Huffington Post, about "So you’re the new CEO?" at Center Stage during the second day of Web Summit on November 13, 2024 in Lisbon, Portugal. The annual conference brings together founders and CEOs of technology companies, as well as policymakers, to discuss the future of the Web. This year runs from November 11 to November 14. The 2024 event announced that has officially sold out its Lisbon flagship event with more than 70,000 attendees, a record breaking 3,000 exhibiting companies, 1,000 investors and 2,000 global media. This year's Web Summit marks the comeback of Paddy Cosgrave, CEO and co-founder of the event, who had resigned in 2023 and was replaced by Katherine Maher. Ms. Maher left after three months and, in April 2024, Cosgrave decided to return as CEO. (Photo by Horacio Villalobos#Corbis/Getty Images) LISBON, PORTUGAL - NOVEMBER 13: Sarah Franklin, CEO, Lattice, delivers remarks while discussing with Lidiane Jones, CEO Bumble, and Danielle Belton, Editor-in-Chief The Huffington Post, about "So you’re the new CEO?" at Center Stage during the second day of Web Summit on November 13, 2024 in Lisbon, Portugal. The annual conference brings together founders and CEOs of technology companies, as well as policymakers, to discuss the future of the Web. This year runs from November 11 to November 14. The 2024 event announced that has officially sold out its Lisbon flagship event with more than 70,000 attendees, a record breaking 3,000 exhibiting companies, 1,000 investors and 2,000 global media. This year's Web Summit marks the comeback of Paddy Cosgrave, CEO and co-founder of the event, who had resigned in 2023 and was replaced by Katherine Maher. Ms. Maher left after three months and, in April 2024, Cosgrave decided to return as CEO. (Photo by Horacio Villalobos#Corbis/Getty Images)

Lattice pushes human-first AI balance in HR software as CEO speaks at SXSW London

Lattice, the $3 billion employee performance software company, doubled down on putting people over AI at SXSW London. CEO Sarah Franklin stressed the importance of blending AI with human workers—not replacing them.

Franklin warned that chasing short-term cost cuts by swapping workers for AI could backfire. Customers want trust and transparency, not just efficiency.

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She called trust “the most important currency” for startups using AI.

“It’s important to ask yourself, ‘Are you building for the success of the AI first [or are] you building for the success of the people and your customers first?”

“It’s good to have efficiency, but you don’t want to trade out trust.”

“Otherwise, we are then in service of the AI versus the AI being in service of us.”

Franklin outlined key rules for AI use: transparency with employees on what AI does, narrow AI applications, and keeping humans accountable for AI decisions.

Lattice has already rolled out an AI-powered HR agent delivering proactive insights and assisting during one-on-one meetings. Clients can build custom AI agents tailored to their businesses.

She told TechCrunch human oversight is a must.

“It’s a way to just have the regular checks and balances that we’re used to in our workforce,” Franklin said.

Her message is clear: the AI winners will be the companies sticking to people-first guardrails. Franklin summed it up like this:

“We all have a responsibility to make sure that we’re doing this for the people of society.

Human connection cannot be replaced, and the winners are going to be the companies that understand that.”

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