Many employees spend a lot of time working in teams, but when those teams are spread out across different locations and don’t have the necessary tools, it can slow collaboration down. Collaborating from afar can result in more virtual meetings, chat messages, and other activities that fill our calendars but leave us with less time to do meaningful or effective work. These tasks are, in essence, a productivity toll: they keep us busy but don’t contribute toward productivity.
Organizations are looking to AI to help change that. Generative AI tools can help employees with a wide range of activities, from summarizing information to composing messages to automating tasks. While some companies are jumping headfirst into the generative AI boom, others are a bit more hesitant to adopt the technology.
Our AI in the Workplace report, based on an online survey commissioned by Zoom and conducted by Morning Consult,* aims to uncover some of the differences between employees and leaders in terms of sentiment toward AI, experiences, perceived benefits and drawbacks, and adoption. More broadly, the report looks at how employees and leaders are spending their workdays — and whether their most time-consuming tasks could potentially be aided by AI.
Here are a few key findings:
- Globally, leaders are more optimistic about AI than employees. Employee sentiments differ by region: those in the APAC region are more positive toward AI, while there are more mixed feelings from U.S. and European employees.
- Leaders report spending more time than employees on activities like drafting messages and taking meeting notes — tasks that could be accomplished with the help of AI.
- Leaders and employees agree on benefits but don’t worry about the same things when it comes to AI.
- Providing education and resources from the top down could potentially address employee concerns and barriers to adoption.
Read on for an in-depth look at AI in the workplace.
*Morning Consult conducted an online survey, commissioned by Zoom, of 11,023 full-time knowledge workers (8,010 employees and 3,013 team leaders) in the U.S., U.K., Ireland, Germany, France, Japan, Singapore, and Australia, between August 10–25, 2023.