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Mind the maturity gap
However, this surface-level adoption masks a deeper problem. While most workers use AI for basic tasks like searching for information (54%) or summarizing documents (38%), only 5% qualify as advanced users who blend multiple tools to unlock roughly a day and a half of additional productivity per week. Advanced users extract far more value, using AI as a thought partner rather than a simple tool.
Skill sets, toolsets and mindsets drive the AI Advantage
What drives this gap between basic AI adoption and true AI adoption excellence is a model we call the AI Advantage. We analyzed more than 15 variables in our 15,000-employee dataset to understand what fuels employees who see the most AI adoption value at work, a measure of adoption success from 0-100 that examines median hours unlocked per employee per week as an outcome variable. We found that three interconnected drivers – skill set, toolset and mindset – power this AI Advantage.
Skill sets unlock productivity
Unsurprisingly, AI training is key to success, accounting for nearly 50% of the AI Advantage score. Employees with 81 or more hours of AI training per year save 14 hours per week, compared to just 3 hours for those with fewer than 4 hours of training. Yet only 12% of surveyed employees received this level of training in the past 12 months, which explains why the global AI adoption value score sits at just 34 out of 100. Manager proficiency also plays a crucial role – employees who are confident their managers know how to use AI effectively see better outcomes. However, the catch is that these highly skilled employees are also 55% more likely to leave. Employers need to align the employee value proposition for employees with hot skills in the market. It is critical to grant continued access to the latest technology as well as opportunities to translate the skills to career options.
Toolsets provide the right tools for the right role and clear guardrails
The right AI tools matter, and employees who report their AI tools are tailored to their specific role also demonstrate significantly higher adoption value. However, in parallel, employees who are most passionate about AI potential are also taking matters into their own hands with 23% to 56% of employees bringing their own AI to work, and even paying for their own subscriptions. Further, there is substantial pressure to perform, with 64% of employees perceiving a workload increase in the past 12 months and 38% fearing job loss without replacement. A new Harvard study agrees that some of these fears may be valid, with roles for junior workers, in particular, shrinking sharply since 2023.4 This makes it even more critical to provide employees with the right toolset and to create the proper guardrails for personal tool usage.