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Microsoft Releases Trends Report for AI at Work

The report found that despite lingering concerns about AI resulting in job losses, professionals have recognized that there are significant opportunities for those with AI aptitude to fill in key roles.  

Organizations globally across industries have been forced to confront a new reality where employees, impatient with the pace at which their senior leadership has been adopting and deploying Artificial Intelligence across operations, have decided to bring their own AI tools to work. This is one of the key findings of Microsoft’s fourth annual Work Trend Index (WTI) Report. 

The report, titled “AI at Work Is Here. Now Comes the Hard Part” conducted in partnership with LinkedIn, provides a comprehensive view of how AI is not only reshaping work, but also the labor market more broadly. It revealed that three in four employees (75%) are already using AI at help them tackle their daily workloads; the use of Generative AI at work specifically has doubled over the past six months. The report also found that despite 79% of business leaders agreeing that their company needs to adopt AI to stay competitive, a lack of clear AI vision and pressure to showcase immediate return on investment (ROI) is stalling plans for widespread adoption.

As a result, a significant number (78%) of employees, unwilling to pass over the many benefits of utilizing AI, are bringing their own AI tools to work. However, more than 50% of AI users say that they don’t want to admit to using the technology at work for fear that their employers might think of them as “lazy” or “replaceable”. 

Microsoft’s 2024 WTI Report also found that close to 70% of professionals believed that AI would be instrumental in helping them get them promoted faster, while 76% said that they need AI skills to remain competitive in today’s job market. When it comes to acquiring talent, 66% of business leaders said that they would not hire someone without AI skills, and an even greater number (71%) said they would hire a less experienced candidate with AI skills over a more experienced candidate without them.  

Learn more about the findings of Microsoft’s fourth annual WTI Report, here

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