AI adoption inside companies has moved from experiment to expectation. But as usage accelerates, the results are becoming harder to ignore: uneven performance, internal friction, and a growing divide between employees who can keep up and those who can’t.
The latest enterprise data from Writer shows companies are struggling to make AI work.
Leaders Are All In, And Feeling the Pressure
Executives are already deeply embedded in AI workflows. Nearly two-thirds report spending at least two hours a day using AI tools, and expectations are rising quickly, with 75% believing AI agents will reach the C-suite within five years.
That urgency is creating pressure at the top. A striking 73% of CEOs say their company’s AI strategy is causing stress or anxiety, with 38% describing it as significant. For many, the stakes feel personal: 61% of executives believe they could lose their job if they fail to lead their organization through the transition.
Companies Are Moving Faster Than Their Strategy
Organizations are already organizing their workforce around AI, but the strategy behind those decisions is often unclear.
While 69% of companies report layoffs tied to AI, nearly 4 in 10 still don’t have a formal plan for turning AI into revenue. Even more telling, 75% of executives say their AI strategy is largely performative — signaling progress externally without offering meaningful internal direction.
The result is a widening gap between action and execution. Companies are making structural decisions before fully understanding how AI will deliver value.
The Payoff Isn’t There…Yet
Despite the scale of investment, returns remain limited. Nearly half of executives say AI adoption has been a major disappointment so far. Only 29% report meaningful returns from generative AI, and just 23% say the same for AI agents.
This disconnect between expectation and outcome is shaping how AI is experienced inside organizations. The tools are everywhere, but their impact is inconsistent.
A Two-Tier Workforce Is Emerging
Inside companies, AI is beginning to separate employees into distinct groups.
An overwhelming 92% of executives say they are actively cultivating a new class of “AI elite” workers — employees who can fully leverage these tools. Those workers are already seeing the benefits: they are about three times more likely to receive promotions and raises, and report dramatically higher productivity, in some cases saving more than four times as much time each week as their peers.
At the same time, others are falling behind. Sixty percent of executives say they plan to lay off employees who can’t or won’t use AI, yet most workers don’t fully grasp that risk — only 27% believe refusing to adopt AI could cost them their job.
That disconnect is creating a workplace where expectations are rising faster than awareness.
Resistance Is No Longer Subtle
Not all employees are embracing the change. In fact, resistance is becoming more visible and more deliberate.
Nearly 29% of employees say they have actively worked against their company’s AI strategy in some way, a number that jumps to 44% among Gen Z. For leadership, this is more than frustration — 76% of executives now see employee sabotage as a serious threat to their company’s future.
This pushback often stems from a mix of job insecurity, dissatisfaction with tools, and a lack of trust in how AI is being implemented. But regardless of the motivation, it’s adding friction to an already uneven transition.
Risk Is Rising With Adoption
As employees experiment with AI, they are also bypassing safeguards. More than a third (35%) say they’ve entered sensitive company information into public AI tools.
From the executive perspective, the consequences are already visible. Sixty-seven percent believe their company has experienced a data leak or security breach tied to employee use of AI tools.
In many cases, workers say they turn to these tools simply because they are more effective than the ones provided internally — exposing a growing gap between official systems and actual workflows.
The Tools Aren’t Meeting Expectations
That gap is reinforced by dissatisfaction with the tools themselves. Across key areas like reliability, integration, and security, fewer than half of executives rate their AI solutions as high-performing. Confidence has dropped sharply compared to the previous year, particularly around data governance.
When approved tools fall short, employees look elsewhere — increasing both adoption and risk at the same time.
Governance and Leadership Are Lagging
As AI systems become more advanced, companies are struggling to maintain control. More than a third of leaders say they don’t have a formal governance plan for AI agents, and a similar share aren’t confident they could quickly shut down a system if it caused harm.
The stakes are high enough that 59% of executives believe a serious AI failure could cost a CEO their job.
At the same time, support at the manager level is thin. Only 35% of employees say their manager is actively helping them navigate AI adoption, and many workers now trust AI more than their manager for certain tasks. Among Gen Z, 64% say they understand how to use AI better than their manager does.
The moral of the story is that AI is scaling faster than companies can manage it.
Organizations are investing heavily, restructuring teams, and raising expectations — but without the systems, strategy, or alignment needed to support that shift. The result is a workplace increasingly defined by uneven performance, internal tension, and rising risk.
AI may be the future of work. But right now, it’s also exposing just how unprepared many companies are to handle it.















