Document mistakes are a routine part of modern work, but new survey data suggests they often have a bigger impact on employee confidence than employers may realize.
According to a survey of more than 1,000 full-time workers conducted by Adobe Acrobat, 82% say they made at least one document-related mistake over the past year. Typos and formatting errors were the most common issues, reflecting the pressure employees face to move quickly while managing increasingly digital workflows.
Hybrid Workers Report the Most Document Mistakes
The survey found notable differences based on where employees work. While document mistakes were common across all work arrangements, hybrid employees were the most likely to report making an error.
Nine in 10 hybrid workers said they had made a document-related mistake in the past year, compared with 80% of fully on-site employees and 77% of remote workers.
The survey does not explain the gap, but the findings suggest work arrangements may influence how frequently employees encounter administrative and document-related errors.
Small Errors, Lasting Anxiety
While many document mistakes are relatively minor, they can leave a lasting impression.
The survey found that 84% of workers become more cautious after making a document error, with many reporting increased double-checking and heightened attention to detail. Among those who experience this hyper-vigilance, 60% say the anxiety lasts for more than a week.
Many workers also reported checking emails, notifications, and shared documents after hours to make sure errors had not slipped through.
Gen Z Feels the Pressure Most
Younger employees reported both higher levels of document-related anxiety and greater consequences when mistakes occur.
Nearly half of Gen Z respondents said they worry about files they have sent at least once a week, a higher rate than any other generation surveyed.
Gen Z workers are also more likely than older generations to face formal disciplinary action for document errors. At the same time, they are the generation most likely to use AI tools to help prevent mistakes before documents are shared.
AI Is Becoming a Workplace Safety Net
As employees look for ways to reduce errors, AI is increasingly becoming part of the process.
Seventy percent of respondents said they use AI tools to help prevent document mistakes. Common uses include proofreading grammar and tone, fact-checking information, summarizing lengthy documents, and helping organize content before distribution.
AI adoption was particularly high among hybrid workers and Gen Z employees, highlighting how technology is becoming embedded in everyday administrative tasks.
Workers Often Fix Problems Quietly
The survey also found that employees frequently resolve smaller mistakes without formally escalating them.
Nearly half said they would quietly correct issues such as broken links, typos, or formatting problems rather than report them to management. Meanwhile, almost one in 10 respondents admitted to secretly correcting a coworker’s document without informing them.
Workers were generally more forgiving of colleagues’ mistakes than they were of their own. Many respondents said they assumed document errors resulted from tight deadlines, heavy workloads, or burnout rather than carelessness.
Confidential Data Remains the Biggest Concern
Not all document mistakes carry the same weight.
Sending confidential information to the wrong recipient emerged as the error workers feared most, with many believing it could lead to serious disciplinary action or even job loss.
By comparison, managers reported far less concern about common mistakes such as typos, formatting issues, or attaching the wrong file, suggesting a disconnect between employee fears and leadership expectations.
Accuracy Matters More Than Ever
As workplaces become increasingly digital, the survey points to a growing challenge for employers: balancing speed with accuracy.
While most document errors are minor, their psychological impact can linger long after a file is sent. The findings suggest that organizations may need to focus not only on preventing mistakes, but also on giving employees the tools, processes, and confidence to recover from them when they occur.














