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Thursday is the last full day of the World Economic Forum in Davos.The rich and powerful have been discussing what 2025 will bring for the economy, tech, and business.This is what BI is seeing and hearing on the ground.Thursday is the last full day of the World Economic Forum in Davos, where the rich and powerful have been discussing the year ahead in economics, business, and tech.This is what Business Insider is hearing and seeing on the ground.Who will manage your AI colleagues?The AI agents are coming, but who will manage them? It's a very real concern among some business leaders I've met with.HR software maker Lattice got some backlash last year when it announced it would start giving AI workers official employment records. The idea might not seem so ridiculous now as business leaders think about how to govern a new class of AI capable of carrying out certain tasks without human input. "We were ahead, but by months," Lattice CEO Sarah Franklin told BI at Davos.ManpowerGroup chief commercial officer Becky Frankiewicz also told BI she'd been hearing from business leaders who are thinking about ways to govern AI agents. Tech companies will likely be the first to jump in, she said, but she already knows of one consulting firm grappling with this challenge of the new AI era. "They've done the agents already," she said. "The next question they were asking was: do we need to have managers for the agents?" Hugh LangleyDavos is already prepping for 2026The conference doesn't technically wrap until midday Friday, but things are already winding down. Some people leave Thursday, while a good chunk of the delegates head out early Friday.But an end is just a new beginning, and that's the case for Davos 2026.Planning for next year's event has already begun. Plenty of companies will lock down their spaces along the Promenade the main street that runs through town where retail shops are transformed into a "haus" for the business renting it by the end of the week if they haven't already done so. When I first arrived on Sunday afternoon, I saw one shop with a large display advertising itself as a potential 2026 home base.Reservations at restaurants for big dinners also start filling up fast, although one person involved in event planning told me some establishments opt to wait a bit in hopes they can just rent out the entire space in one go.The entire week is a boon for local businesses and homeowners, who make many multiples above what they see selling things or renting out their space any other week of the year.Of course, some shops choose to stay open, like the town's luxury watch shop. (Its Rolex signage fits in quite well with the vibes, to be honest.)And then there's the one souvenir shop in the middle of town, which might secretly do the best business. A simple cotton T-shirt with some Davos branding can run you close to $40. Dan DeFrancesco