Advertisements
WorkX Conference
Advertise With Us
Saturday, January 31, 2026
Explore
Allwork.Space
No Result
View All Result
Newsletters
  • Latest News
  • Leadership
  • Work-life
  • Coworking
  • Design
  • Career Growth
  • Tech
  • Workforce
  • CRE
  • Business
  • Podcast
  • More
    • Columnists
      • Dr. Gleb Tsipursky – The Office Whisperer
      • Nirit Cohen – WorkFutures
      • Angela Howard – Culture Expert
      • Drew Jones – Design & Innovation
      • Jonathan Price – CRE & Flex Expert
    • Get the Newsletter
    • Events
    • Advertise With Us
    • Publish a Press Release
    • Brand PulseNew
    • Partner Portal
No Result
View All Result
Newsletters
Allwork.Space
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Leadership
  • Work-life
  • Coworking
  • Design
  • Workforce
  • Tech
  • CRE
  • Business
  • Podcast
  • Career Growth
  • Newsletters
Advertisements
Yardi Kube automates flex and coworking operations
Home News

90% Of Workers Are Now Using Chatbots As Part Of Booming Shadow AI Economy

MIT report finds employees are skipping slow official AI projects, while secretly using personal ChatGPT, Claude, and other tools to automate work — often hidden from IT and leadership.

Featured InsightsbyFeatured Insights
August 20, 2025
in News
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
90% Of Workers Are Now Using Chatbots As Part Of Booming Shadow AI Economy

Are you a member of the “shadow AI economy”? Credit: Getty Images; Source: Fortune via Reuters Connect

A sweeping new report from MIT’s Project NANDA, State of AI in Business 2025, has uncovered a dramatic split in the landscape of enterprise artificial intelligence: While official AI adoption in companies stalls, a robust “shadow AI economy” is flourishing under the radar, powered by employees using personal AI tools for day-to-day work.

The main thrust of the study is the “GenAI divide”: the finding by MIT that despite $30 billion to $40 billion invested in gen-AI initiatives, only 5% of organizations are seeing transformative returns. 

Advertisements
Nexudus - Is Your Space Performing?

The vast majority — 95% — report zero impact on profit and loss statements from formal AI investments. Lurking under the surface, though, MIT also finds huge engagement with LLM tools on the part of workers, a shadow economy of seemingly widespread AI adoption.

Rather than waiting for official enterprise gen-AI projects to overcome technical and organizational hurdles, employees are routinely leveraging personal ChatGPT accounts, Claude subscriptions, and other consumer-grade AI tools to automate tasks. This activity is often invisible to IT departments and C-suites.

Advertisements
Workspace Geek - Coworking Software Simplified

Employees are already crossing the GenAI Divide through personal AI tools. This ‘shadow AI’ often delivers better ROI than formal initiatives and reveals what actually works for bridging the divide.

The 40% and 90% split

The study was based on a review of over 300 publicly disclosed AI initiatives, interviews with representatives from 52 organizations, and survey responses from 153 senior leaders.

It reveals that while only 40% of companies have purchased official LLM subscriptions, employees in over 90% of companies regularly use personal AI tools for work. In fact, nearly every respondent reported using LLMs in some form as part of their regular workflow.

Many shadow users describe interacting with LLMs multiple times a day, every workday — with adoption often far outpacing their companies’ sanctioned AI initiatives, which remain stuck in pilot stages.

Advertisements
Yardi Kube automates flex and coworking operations

Project NANDA’s analysis highlights key reasons for this divide:

  • Flexibility and immediate utility: Tools like ChatGPT and Copilot are praised for their ease of use, adaptability, and instantly visible value — qualities missing from many custom-built enterprise solutions.
  • Workflow fit: Employees customize consumer tools to their specific needs, bypassing enterprise approval cycles and integration challenges.
  • Low barriers: Shadow AI’s accessibility accelerates adoption, as users can iterate and experiment freely.

As the report notes, “The organizations that recognize this pattern and build on it represent the future of enterprise AI adoption.”

These advantages contrast sharply with official gen-AI deployments, where complex integrations, inflexible interfaces, and lack of persistent memory often stall progress. This helps explain a “chasm” in between pilots and production.

The ‘war for simple work’

According to the report, shadow AI usage creates a feedback loop: As employees become more familiar with personal AI tools that suit their needs, they become less tolerant of static enterprise tools.

“The dividing line isn’t intelligence,” the authors write, explaining that the problems with enterprise AI have to do with memory, adaptability, and learning capability.

As a result, 90% of users said they prefer humans to do “mission-critical work,” while AI has “won the war for simple work,” with 70% preferring AI for drafting emails and 65% for basic analysis.

Meanwhile, the study engages in some myth-busting, puncturing five commonly held beliefs about enterprise AI. Contrary to the hype, it finds:

  • Few jobs have been replaced by AI.
  • Beyond the limited impact on jobs, generative AI also isn’t transforming the way business is done.
  • Most companies have already invested heavily in gen-AI pilots.
  • Problems stem less from regulations or model performance, and more from tools that fail to learn or adapt.
  • Internal AI development “build” projects fail twice as often as externally sourced “buy” solutions.

That being said, the tech sector layoffs of the last several years have become entrenched in the economy, whether they are related to AI adoption or not. And research on the declining wage premium of the college degree suggests that a fundamental shift is occurring in the labor market.

Advertisements
Ergonofis

But the AI sector may be hitting a plateau, with the underwhelming launch of OpenAI’s ChatGPT-5 leading some prominent writers to wonder: What if this is as good as AI gets?

In fact, the Federal Reserve commissioned several staff economists to consider the question, and their base case is that it will significantly boost productivity. 

But they also said it could end up having an import more like an invention that literally banished shadows when it appeared over 100 years ago: the light bulb.

Written by Nick Lichtenberg for Fortune as “The ‘shadow AI economy’ is booming: Workers at 90% of companies say they use chatbots, but most of them are hiding it from IT” and republished with permission.

Advertisements
Nexudus - Is Your Space Performing?
Advertisements
Subscribe to the Future of Work Newsletter
Source: Fortune
Tags: AINorth AmericaWorkforce
Share8Tweet5Share1
Featured Insights

Featured Insights

Articles under Featured Insights are sourced from leading publications such as Fortune, offered through our collaboration with Reuters. Each piece is hand-selected to provide valuable perspectives and exceptional journalism to keep you informed on the trends shaping the future of work. If you would also like to be considered for syndication on Allwork.Space, please contact us.

Other Stories Recommended For You

The High-Growth Roles And Transferable Talents Powering The Green Economy
Career Growth

The High-Growth Roles And Transferable Talents Powering The Green Economy

bySheya Michaelides
10 hours ago

The global drive for sustainability is creating jobs and increasing the demand for green skills.

Read more
By 2040, Gen Alpha Sees Flexible Schedules and Remote Work as the Norm

By 2040, Gen Alpha Sees Flexible Schedules and Remote Work as the Norm

24 hours ago
Office Attendance Rose 5.6% in 2025, but Recovery Is Losing Momentum

Office Attendance Rose 5.6% in 2025, but Recovery Is Losing Momentum

24 hours ago
Germany’s Unemployment Tops 3 Million, Merz Calls Jobs Data An “Alarm Signal”

Germany’s Unemployment Tops 3 Million, Merz Calls Jobs Data An “Alarm Signal”

24 hours ago
Advertisements
Deel - Upgrade your global team management
Advertisements
Deel - Upgrade your global team management

The Future of Work® Newsletter helps you understand how work is changing — without the noise.

Choose daily or weekly updates to stay current, and monthly editions to explore worklife, work environments, and leadership in depth.

Trusted by 22,000+ leaders and professionals.

2026 Allwork.Space News Corporation. Exploring the Future Of Work® since 2003. All Rights Reserved

Advertise  Submit Your Story   Newsletters   Privacy Policy   Terms Of Use   About Us   Contact   Submit a Press Release   Brand Pulse   Podcast   Events   

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Topics
    • Business
    • Leadership
    • Work-life
    • Workforce
    • Career Growth
    • Design
    • Tech
    • Coworking
    • Marketing
    • CRE
  • Podcast
  • Events
  • About Us
  • Advertise | Media Kit
  • Submit Your Story
Newsletters

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
-
00:00
00:00

Queue

Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00