AI for HR is everywhere right now.
From drafting policy updates to summarising engagement surveys, tools like ChatGPT have made it easy for HR teams to generate content in seconds. But as more HR professionals adopt AI, a bigger question is emerging:
Is generic AI enough, or do you need a specialised AI for HR?
If you’ve ever wondered whether there’s a meaningful difference between a broad AI tool and a purpose-built HR AI platform like Thesmia, this article breaks it down clearly — and practically.
Generic AI tools are designed to be helpful across almost any topic.
Ask them to write an email? Done.
Summarise a policy? No problem.
Draft an announcement? Easy.
But here’s the key difference:
Generic AI optimises for answering questions.
Specialised HR AI optimises for landing change.
Thesmia isn’t designed to simply “write HR emails.” As outlined in our internal comparison guide , it’s purpose-built to help HR teams get initiatives adopted — whether that’s:
It focuses on:
That’s a very different optimisation model.
One of the biggest risks of using generic AI for HR is speed without strategy.
Most general AI tools jump straight into drafting content. They comply quickly. They produce something polished.
But they rarely ask:
Specialised AI for HR teams works differently.
As described in the comparison deck , Thesmia behaves more like a senior HR lead — pushing for clarity before generating content. It considers segmentation (Exec, managers, employees), likely objections, and measurable outcomes before producing messaging.
The result?
Communications that are more likely to work in the real world — not just look good in a document.
Internal communications isn’t an announcement channel. It’s a change channel.
Generic AI can produce a launch email.
But change adoption requires more than launch day.
Thesmia embeds change management thinking (including ADKAR-style sequencing and manager enablement), meaning it naturally supports:
Generic AI can generate these — but only if you explicitly ask.
A specialised HR AI tool defaults to them.
For lean HR teams under pressure, that default matters.
If you’ve ever asked generic AI to “write an email about X,” you know what happens.
You get… an email.
But most HR initiatives require a package:
According to the comparison overview , Thesmia is biased toward producing practical “packages,” not isolated outputs.
For small People teams juggling multiple initiatives, that shift from one-off drafts to structured implementation assets is a major productivity difference.
There’s another subtle but important difference.
AI-generated HR comms often sound polished… but vague.
“Excited to announce…”
“Thrilled to share…”
“On this journey together…”
The risk? Employees increasingly recognise AI-generated tone. And when messaging lacks clarity or substance, it can damage trust.
Specialised AI for HR is designed to:
It’s built to protect psychological safety and credibility — not just produce clean copy .
Generic AI tends to comply.
If you ask it to soften messaging around a controversial restructure, it will.
If you ask it to downplay risk, it probably will.
But HR sometimes needs a challenger — not just a writer.
Thesmia is intentionally designed to professionally challenge:
That makes it closer to a strategic partner than a content generator.
When evaluating AI for HR, security is not optional.
Generic AI tools often store conversation history in the cloud by default.
Thesmia’s architecture differs:
For HR teams handling restructures, investigations, or sensitive employee data, that separation matters.
Yes — for some things.
Generic AI is brilliant for:
But when the stakes are higher — when you’re driving adoption, influencing leaders, or managing change — the structure, bias, and built-in expertise of a specialised AI for HR becomes valuable.
The difference isn’t about tone.
It’s about optimisation.
Generic AI optimises for responsiveness.
Specialised HR AI optimises for adoption.
The question isn’t “Is AI useful for HR?”
It’s:
What kind of AI are you using — and what is it optimised for?
If your goal is faster drafting, generic AI works.
If your goal is landing change and protecting trust, you may need something built specifically for HR.
And that’s where the real difference lives.