New research from Asana’s Work Innovation Lab shows that UK workers are happy to embrace working alongside AI, and are even considering organizational policies toward the technology when job hunting. Credit: Shutterstock New research from Asana shows that although UK workers are open to the opportunities that AI can bring to the workplace, a disconnect exists between organizational plans for the technology and the current employee experience. The data is derived from a survey of 2,741 UK workers, carried out by Asana’s Work Innovation Lab, a think tank that carries out research to help businesses meet the demands of the evolving workplace. According to the findings, AI’s role in helping companies meet objectives is recognized by workers, with 49% of surveyed employees confident that AI will help their companies reach their objectives more effectively than traditional methods of working. With 40% of workers stating their organizations are currently experiencing high levels of burnout, 92% of those surveyed said they want AI to be used to enhance parts of their job. Notably, 61% of respondents approve of AI being used for development and training. Employees also highlighted AI usage for customer service interactions, decision making processes, and hiring processes, which had approval rates of 50%, 32%, and 26%, respectively. However, there is a clear disconnect between what employees would like to see AI used for in the workplace and how it is currently being deployed. A prime example highlighted by the survey is goal-setting. While 48% of respondents said they expect their companies to use AI for goal-setting, only 5% of UK employees say their organizations are currently doing so. Employees also said they wanted to know more about how their company intends to use the technology, with only 30% of respondents believing they currently have transparency into their organization’s AI plans. This contrasts with the 39% of executives who said they believed they had been transparent when laying out their plans. AI is also starting to play a role in career planning for UK workers, with the research highlighting a number of career-related considerations. Among them, 56% of those surveyed said they would be more likely to consider working for an organization that was transparent about its use of AI, while 44% said a company taking a human-centric approach to the technology was important. If an organization offers training on AI, that would appeal to 40% of respondents. Instead of asking ourselves how AI will change our work, we should be asking ourselves how we as humans can positively shape that change, said Rebecca Hinds, head of the Work Innovation Lab, at a roundtable event last week. “AI holds enormous power because of its complexity and sophistication, but in order to harness the promise and the potential of AI in our workplace we need to adopt a deeply human approach,” Hinds said. “Decades of research show that the implementation of new technology fails in most cases not because the technology isn’t efficient, but because humans naturally resist change.” When it comes to making a success of AI in the workplace, Hinds said the organizations need to prioritize change management, upskilling and reskilling, and experimentation and allow their workers to commit time to familiarize themselves with these news tools. Related content news Platform lets creators monetize their content for use in LLM training Avail’s Corpus tool ‘flies in the face’ of comments made by head of Microsoft AI, says analyst. By Paul Barker Jul 17, 2024 5 mins Artificial Intelligence news ChatGPT users speechless over delays OpenAI has delayed an alpha release of its new voice mode for ChatGPT, citing safety and scalability concerns By Gyana Swain Jun 26, 2024 4 mins Generative AI Voice Assistants Artificial Intelligence news Public opinion on AI divided While many think it may benefit society as a whole, they find it hard to see what’s in it for them, highlighting some lessons for employers and developers. By Lynn Greiner May 28, 2024 7 mins Employee Experience Generative AI IT Skills news analysis There aren't nearly enough workers to support new US chip production Even as the semiconductor industry hopes to find and recruit skilled workers, a lack of talent could undermine national objectives, push up labor costs, and hinder the returns from the billions of dollars being spent, according to a McKinsey & Co By Lucas Mearian May 15, 2024 10 mins CPUs and Processors Government Manufacturing Industry Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe