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From the Peace Corps to the boardroom: Humana CEO Jim Rechtin on listening and leading

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It’s been a tough year for Humana (No. 39 on the Fortune 500), the health-insurance giant that primarily serves seniors enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans. Rising medical costs and a drop in the quality ratings that are used to calculate bonus payments have made an impact. On Nov. 5, Humana reported a drop in net income to $1.62 a share, from $3.98 a share the year prior, and lowered its full-year earnings guidance. 

CEO Jim Rechtin, who has been in the role since July 2024, spoke to Fortune prior to the release of earnings, and discussed how he’s navigating a tough climate and trying to transform Humana.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity. 


You started your career in the Peace Corps, directing a public health and water sanitation project in what’s today the Republic of Congo. What did you learn from that experience?

Six months in, I was ready to quit and go home. We were doing construction projects to build latrines and cap wells and we expected the communities to fund those things themselves. 

They’re sitting there, saying ‘I have a stream in my backyard that has perfectly clear water in it.’ As we began to ask questions, people would come back to say, ‘Well, we need latrines in the market. We need latrines at the school, the hospital.’ So we were able to target the project in a different way. The fundamental lesson is, go talk to your customers and ask them what they need, because they know.

You’re assigned this project, but the project doesn’t work because nobody’s been on the ground there and you spend your first year realizing it’s not going to work. So you start talking to people and listening to them and you realize that we misunderstood the need. That really is, frankly, no different than my first year and a half here.

Humana is like the Peace Corps?

You come in with an idea of what needs to happen, but the reality is you don’t know.

So you spend a whole bunch of time going out, talking to members, providers, your own associates, and you begin putting ideas together. 

Most of my background has been in the provider space, not the insurance space. We’re both, but we’re predominantly in the insurance space. The challenge there is that it’s a business built around managing a high volume of transactions and pricing risk, but it’s not a business that is inherently attuned to consumers. If you interviewed a bunch of our 65,000 associates, you’d walk away and say, ‘Hey, these are good people. They really care about customers.’ Then you would realize that we have almost no tools to collect feedback from our customers.

A lot of what we’re trying to do now is behave more like a consumer health care company, to the degree that there is such a thing in the U.S. right now, as opposed to a traditional insurance company. That starts with understanding who your customer is and getting feedback and trying to balance that multiyear journey with the near-term pressures.

Once you get all that feedback, are there some inherent constrictions with the business model in terms of incorporating it?

I don’t want to pretend that there aren’t obstacles, but I would say that they’re not structural to the business or the sector. They are obstacles of history, the cultural biases that we bring to every conversation. It’s the way that we have chosen to do things that we have to unwind.

Any examples?

We recently rolled out a new portal for the annual enrollment process. What we have never done before is say: Let’s rapidly prototype one in 30 days, trial it with a bunch of real consumers, get feedback, modify the next 30 days, get feedback again and so on. We would have typically come up with a six-month plan to build something, with no input from the people who are going to use it and then find out that we didn’t build it quite right. There’s no structural reason to do it one way or another.

Your customer base must skew older because the bulk of your revenue comes from Medicare Advantage (private Medicare-approved plans that often offer extra benefits like vision, dental and fitness coverage).

Yes, most of our business is built to serve seniors. We do have other businesses that don’t serve seniors, and those are growing, but we predominantly serve seniors. They’re on Facebook, they use YouTube, they shop on Amazon. They may not be as digitally native as a 25-year-old, but they’re absolutely digitally engaged. Sometimes we get caught up in the bias that they’re not. We need to give them the type of experience that they want to engage with. We sponsor the Senior Games, kind of like the Olympics for seniors, and this year we rolled out an adjacent event called the Cognitive Games.

Cognitive games?

It’s things like Bejeweled and Wordle and those kinds of games. In the first week, we engaged a few hundred thousand people, so we knew we’d built something that they wanted.

How does that help the Humana band?

On the Cognitive Games, I don’t know the answer. For what it’s worth, we didn’t start sponsoring the Senior Games because we were looking for an ROI. We thought it was a good thing to do, as a civic contribution. We almost stumbled into the ROI by accident because we were seeing people enrolling at the Senior Games or after.

The bigger thing is how it changed perceptions of our brand. If you were to interview people at the Senior Games about Humana, they would tell you that it’s about wellness, taking an interest in the whole person’s health. That goes beyond a let-me-pay-your-claim consumer health care company. We’re out where consumers are, building a relationship with them. We’re not managing a payment transaction in the shadows.

Any thoughts on the current administration’s moves to cut health care costs?

Health care is one of the largest expenditures in the federal and state budgets. There’s not much that goes on in the policy world that doesn’t have some second- or third-order implication for us. So, yes, we pay attention. Yes, it matters. I think we should all be concerned about the fiscal pressures that the country is under right now. Those fiscal pressures and the size of health care expenses means there will continue to be pressure on our sector.

There are these opposing forces: One is the fiscal realities of our country and our government; the other is an active voter block that really loves Medicare and Medicare Advantage.  Those two things are pushing on each other, and we sit in between. We can play that role passively and hope that those two pressures resolve themselves, or we have an opportunity to be proactive in trying to diffuse that pressure, taking a more active stance in helping consumers make good health care decisions, which will reduce costs over time. Most consumers want to make good health care decisions. They need information and the tools to be able to do that. And so we can play a more active role. To me, that goes right back to being a consumer health care company.

“Most consumers want to make good health care decisions. They need information and the tools to be able to do that.Jim Rechtin, CEO, Humana

What are we not paying enough attention to, in terms of the opportunities or the challenges?

Most of the conversation is about one annual budget after another. The things that we need to fix are not going to be fixed in an annual budget cycle. How do we get a more holistic solution to the fiscal pressures and the health care components?

What would you do?

How do you take the unnecessary utilization out of the system? And how do we streamline and simplify the system in a way that takes a whole bunch of the bureaucratic cost out of it? That’s not limited to any one sector. A lot of that has to do with how the different sectors of health care interact with each other. Billing and collecting costs too much. Distribution costs too much. The hurdles to access create unnecessary cost. We need more modern pipes to exchange data between the different players in the industry. We need, frankly, more access to data so that we can better inform and guide and educate our members on how to access care. The fragmented nature of how our system works creates friction. It creates cost. And a lot of that is about not being modernized.

Is AI as transformative as we make it out to be in this space?

It will be over the next five years.  You can’t move as fast as you’d like to roll out the capability, the tools. But yes, health care and the industry and the economy more broadly are going to look very different.

How are you using it right now?

Let me give you examples. We are rolling out ambient listening technology that takes the administrative burden of being a doctor off our doctors and allows them to spend more time with the patient. We have a new tool that we just rolled out for our brokers and sales agents that we refer to as Agent Assist that allows them to streamline a very complicated sales process. For Medicare Advantage, they have to comb through dozens and dozens of documents. AI can comb through all of those documents on an automated basis and answer very basic questions much more rapidly, shortening the sales cycle and getting frankly more accurate answers. Eventually, consumers are going to interact with it directly. We can’t do that yet, but that’s coming, probably three years from now.

If we want real-time approvals of requests, then we want AI for prior authorizations. But we want it to say yes, not no, right? Right now, we use AI tools to get to a faster yes. The nos go to a doctor who can get better documentation in front of them faster to make that process more efficient.

What do we do for this next generation of entry-level workers that may not have a lot of job opportunities right now? 

I grew up predominantly in Indianapolis and a little bit in Kentucky. That was my whole life. I spent very little time in any other part of the country. During my sophomore year, I did a service trip to Appalachia. I spent a month mostly living with a family there, and I walked away realizing how different life is only a couple hundred miles away from where I grew up. It got me curious: What’s it like elsewhere? So I did a service trip to Honduras and then the Dominican Republic. I wanted to learn more. And that’s what led me to the Peace Corps.

What I wanted to do is live in a community that was very different from the community I grew up in. Experiencing new things is really what’s valuable from a learning experience. If we are going to find ourselves in a world where entry-level jobs are harder to come by, and the economy is in transition, and we need to find mechanisms to allow a generation of kids to keep growing, to get those new experiences.

What did it teach you about yourself?

I was a political science major. We talked about rule of law and democracy. You don’t really understand what those are until you’re in a place where they aren’t. That was probably the biggest thing that was eye-opening for me, to be in a place where you don’t have a mature judicial system or legal system. But the biggest thing that I realized is the power of asking questions.  

Five years from now, will Humana look different?

It better, because if it doesn’t look different, it won’t survive, right? I think that’s true of everybody. Humana has unique positioning to have a real impact on how improved quality care reduces total cost. We serve seniors, who have a lot of health care needs, and it’s an individual product so you can tailor the product. Third, we are also in the primary care space. We’re in the home health space. We have our own ability to distribute medication in areas that have the greatest ability to impact chronic conditions and the total cost of delivering health care services. I think you can really have an impact on both cost and quality of care.

How do you want people to think about the brand?

If we’re going to stop being viewed as a health insurance company and start being viewed as consumer health care company, we need to engage our members in a way that does two things. One is arm them with what they need to make better health care decisions on the front end to avoid or delay downstream issues. Second, help them navigate the system. We’re not the provider who touches them every day, but we have more data and more knowledge about those providers and about the experience that they are going to have with them than anybody else. We have never stepped back and fully acknowledged that we have agency in that experience.

So you’ve been more of a passive actor in the background in that process?

Way too often. That’s what health insurance has been: They’ve been passive actors.

So what are your priorities right now?

We are not where we want to be, and we’ve been very public. The challenge is that when we realized we had fallen behind, we only had three months to fix it. We feel very good about the trajectory that we’re on for next year. We have to get our star ratings right, which means we need to make sure that we are delivering for our customers, both from an experience standpoint and clinical standpoint. That’s number one.

The second priority for us is what I would describe as tech enablement. How do we use technology to better engage members and run more efficiently? Third, how do we really differentiate the experience we are delivering, which is not all technology driven. We’ve simplified our product. We’ve made it easier to access preventative care and we’re taking away the financial hurdles. To do that, we are streamlining the prior authorization process to make it less cumbersome, both for providers and consumers. We are partnering with companies like EPIC (an electronic health record system) to create more cost transparency for our members. At the end of the day, it’s about building an experience that a consumer wants to be a part of.



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The ‘Great Housing Reset’ is coming: Income growth will outpace home-price growth in 2026

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Homebuyers may experience a reprieve in 2026 as price normalization and an increase in home sales over the next year will take some pressure off the market—but don’t expect homebuying to be affordable in the short run for Gen Z and young families.

The “Great Housing Reset” will start next year, with income growth outpacing home-price growth for a prolonged period for the first time since the Great Recession era, according to a Redfin report released this week. 

The residential real estate brokerage sees mortgage rates in the low-6% range, down from down from the 2025 average of 6.6%; a median home sales price increase of just 1%, down from 2% this year; and monthly housing payments growth that will lag behind wage growth, which will remain steady at 4%.

These trends toward increased affordability will likely bring back some house hunters to the market, but many Gen Zers and young families will opt for nontraditional living situations, according to the report. 

More adult children will be living with their parents, as households continue to shift further away from a nuclear family structure, Redfin predicted.

“Picture a garage that’s converted into a second primary suite for adult children moving back in with their parents,” the report’s authors wrote. “Redfin agents in places like Los Angeles and Nashville say more homeowners are planning to tailor their homes to share with extended family.”

Gen Z and millennial homeownership rates plateaued last year, with no improvement expected. Just over one-quarter of Gen Zers owned their home in 2024, while the rate for millennial owners was 54.9% in the same year.

Meanwhile, about 6% of Americans who struggled to afford housing as of mid-2025 moved back in with their parents, while another 6% moved in with roommates. Both trends are expected to increase in 2026, according to the report.

Obstacles to home affordability 

Despite factors that could increase affordability for prospective homebuyers, C. Scott Schwefel, a real estate attorney at Shipman, Shaiken & Schwefel, LLC, told Fortune that income growth and home-price growth are just a few keys to sustainable homeownership. 

An improved income-to-price ratio is welcome, but unless tax bills stabilize, many households may not experience a net relief, Schwefel said.

“Prospective buyers need to recognize that affordability is not just price versus income…it’s price, mortgage rate and the annual bill for living in a place—and that bill includes property taxes,” he added.

In November, voters—especially young ones—showed lowering housing costs is their priority, the report said. But they also face high sale prices and mortgage rates, inflated insurance premiums, and potential utility costs hikes due to a data center construction boom that’s driving up energy bills. The report’s authors expect there to be a bipartisan push to help remedy the housing affordability crisis.

Still, an affordable housing market for first-time home buyers and young families still may be far away.

“The U.S. housing market should be considered moving from frozen to thawing,” Sergio Altomare, CEO of Hearthfire Holdings, a real estate private equity and development company, told Fortune

“Prices aren’t surging, but they’re no longer falling,” he added. “We are beginning to unlock some activity that’s been trapped for a couple of years.”



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Nvidia’s CEO says AI adoption will be gradual, but we still may all end up making robot clothing

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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang doesn’t foresee a sudden spike of AI-related layoffs, but that doesn’t mean the technology won’t drastically change the job market—or even create new roles like robot tailors.

The jobs that will be the most resistant to AI’s creeping effect will be those that consist of more than just routine tasks, Huang said during an interview with podcast host Joe Rogan this week. 

“If your job is just to chop vegetables, Cuisinart’s gonna replace you,” Huang said.

On the other hand, some jobs, such as radiologists, may be safe because their role isn’t just about taking scans, but rather interpreting those images to diagnose people.

“The image studying is simply a task in service of diagnosing the disease,” he said.

Huang allowed that some jobs will indeed go away, although he stopped short of using the drastic language from others like Geoffrey Hinton a.k.a. “the Godfather of AI” and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, both of whom have previously predicted massive unemployment thanks to the improvement of AI tools.

Yet, the potential, AI-dominated job market Huang imagines may also add some new jobs, he theorized. This includes the possibility that there will be a newfound demand for technicians to help build and maintain future AI assistants, Huang said, but also other industries that are harder to imagine.

“You’re gonna have robot apparel, so a whole industry of—isn’t that right? Because I want my robot to look different than your robot,” Huang said. “So you’re gonna have a whole apparel industry for robots.”

The idea of AI-powered robots dominating jobs once held by humans may sound like science fiction, and yet some of the world’s most important tech companies are already trying to make it a reality. 

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has made the company’s Optimus robot a central tenet of its future business strategy. Just last month, Musk predicted money will no longer exist in the future and work will be optional within the next 10 to 20 years thanks to a fully fledged robotic workforce. 

AI is also advancing so rapidly that it already has the potential to replace millions of jobs. AI can adequately complete work equating to about 12% of U.S. jobs, according to a Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) report from last month. This represents about 151 million workers representing more than $1 trillion in pay, which is on the hook thanks to potential AI disruption, according to the study.

Even Huang’s potentially new job of AI robot clothesmaker may not last. When asked by Rogan whether robots could eventually make apparel for other robots, Huang replied: “Eventually. And then there’ll be something else.”



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The ‘Mister Rogers’ of Corporate America shows Gen Z how to handle toxic bosses

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After two decades of climbing the corporate ladder at companies ranging from ABC, ESPN, and Charter Communications (commonly known as Spectrum), Timm Chiusano quit it all to become a content creator. 

He wasn’t just walking away from high titles, but a high salary, too. In his peak years, Chiusano made $600,000 to $800,000 annually. But in June of 2024, after giving a 12-week notice, he “responsibility fired himself” from his corporate job as VP of production and creative services at Charter.

He did it all to help others navigate the challenges of a workplace, and appreciate the most mundane parts of life on TikTok.

@timmchiusano

most people are posting their 2024 recaps; these are a few of my favorite moments from the year that was, but i need to start reintroducing myself too i dont have a college degree, no one in my life knew that until i was 35 when i eventually got my foot in the door in my early 20’s after a few years of substitute teaching and part time jobs, i thought for sure i had found the career path of my dreams in live sports production i didn’t think i had a chance of surviving that first college football season but i busted my ass, stuck around and got promoted 5 times in 5 years then i met a girl in Las Vegas, got married in 7 months, and freaked out about my career that had me travelling 36 weeks a year i had to find a more stable “desk job”, i was scared shitless that i was pigeonholed and the travel would eventually destroy my marriage i crafted a narative for espn arguing they needed me on their marketing team because of my unique perspective coming from the production side i got rejected, but kept trying and a year i got that job the 7 years with espn were incredible, but also exhausting and raised all kinds of questions about corporate america, toxic situations, and capitalism in general why was i borderline heart attack stressed so often when i could see that my ideas were literally generating 2,000 times the money that i was getting paid? in 2012 i had a kid and in 2013 i got the biggest job of my career to reinvent how to produce 20,000 commercials a year for small business it took 12 rounds of interviews, a drug test i somehow passed, and a background check that finally made me tell my wife of 8 years that i didnt have a college degree they brought me in the thursday before my first day and told me what i told grace in that clip the next decade was an insane blur; i saw everything one would ever see in their career from the perspective of an executive at a fortune 100 i started making tiktoks, kinda blacked out at some point in 2019 and responsibly fired myself in 2024 to see what i might be capable of on my own with all the skills i picked up along my career journey now the mission is pay what i know forward, and see if i can become the mr rogers of corporate america cc: @grace beverley @Ryan Holiday @Subway Oracle

♬ original sound – timm chiusano

What started as short-video vlogs on just about anything in 2020 (reviews on protein bars, sushi, and sneakers) later transitioned to videos on growing up, and dealing with life’s challenges, like coming to terms when you have a toxic boss. Today, his platform on TikTok has over 1 million followers

With the help of going viral from his “loop” format where videos end and seamlessly circle back to the beginning, he began making more videos as a side-hustle on top of his day-to-day tasks in the office.

“How can I get people to be smarter and more comfortable about their careers in ways that are gonna help on a day-to-day basis?” Chiusano told Fortune.

Today, he could go by many titles: former vice president at a Fortune 100 company, motivational speaker, dad, content creator, or as he labels himself, the Mister Rogers of Corporate America. 

Just as the late public television icon helped kids navigate the complexities of childhood, Chiusano wants to help young adults think about how to approach their careers and their potential to make an impact. 

“Mister Rogers is the greatest of all time in his space. I will never get to that level of impact. But it’s an easy way to describe what I’m trying to do, and it consistently gives me a goal to strive for,” he said. “There are some parallels here with the quirkiness.”

Firing himself after 25 years in the corporate world

Even with years in corporate, Chiusano doesn’t resemble the look of a typical buttoned-up executive. Today, he has more of a relaxed Brooklyn dad attire, with a sleeve of tattoos and a confidence to blend in with any trendy middle aged man in Soho. During our interview, he showed off one of the first tattoos he got: two businessmen shaking hands, a reference to Radiohead’s OK Computer album.

“This is a dope ass Monday in your 40s,” began one of his videos.

It consisted of Chiusano doing everyday things such as eating leftovers, going to the gym, training for the NYC marathon, taking out the trash, dropping his daughter off at school, a rehearsal for a Ted Talk, eating lunch with his wife, and brand deal meetings. Though the content sounds pretty normal, that’s the point. 

“The reason why I fired myself in the first place was to be here,” he says in the video while picking his daughter up from school.

Today, Chiusano spends his days making content on navigating workplace culture, public speaking, brand deals, brand partnerships, executive coaching, writing a book, and the most important job: being a dad to his 13-year-old daughter Evelyn.

“I’m basically flat [in salary] to where I was, and this is everything I could ever want in the world,” he said. “The ability to send my kid to the school she’s been going to, eat sushi takeout almost as much as I’d like, and do nice things for my wife.”

In fact, when sitting inside one of his favorite New York City spots, Lure Fishbar, he keeps getting stopped by regulars who know him by name. He points out that one of his favorite interviews he filmed here was with legendary filmmaker Ken Burns.

Advice to Gen Z

In a time where Gen Z has been steering to more unconventional paths, like content creation or skill trades rather than just a 9-to-5 office job, Chiusano opens up a lens to what life looks like when deciding to be present rather than always looking for what’s next—a mistake he said he made in his 20s. 

Instead, he wants to teach the younger generation to build skills for as long as you can, but “if you are unhappy, that’s a very different conversation.”

“I think some people will make themselves more unhappy because they feel like that’s what’s expected of a situation,” he said.

“I would love to be able to empower your generation more, to be like somebody’s gonna have to be the head of HR at that super random company to put cool standards and practices in place for better work-life balance for the employees.” 





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