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Home Leadership

The One Thread Connecting RTO Backlash, AI Resistance, And Leadership Failures

Hybrid work and AI projects face the same obstacle: employees are far more likely to embrace change when they understand the reason behind it.

Emma AscottbyEmma Ascott
June 29, 2026
in Leadership
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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The One Thread Connecting RTO Backlash, AI Resistance, And Leadership Failures

As workplaces change, understanding people may matter more than managing technology.

This article is based on the Allwork.Space Future of Work Podcast episode “Why Employees Reject Managers, Return-to-Office Rules, and Even AI Rollouts with Matt Bertman, Nick Bloom and Ram Srinivasan.” Click here to watch or listen to the full episode.

Organizations often treat leadership development, workplace flexibility, and artificial intelligence as separate challenges. Yet the same underlying issue is emerging across all three: trust.

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Employees are questioning managers, resisting return-to-office mandates, and expressing skepticism about AI initiatives for many of the same reasons. When communication is weak, expectations are unclear, and employees feel excluded from decision-making, workplace change becomes significantly harder to implement.

Insights shared by leadership expert Matt Bertman, Stanford economist Nick Bloom, and AI adoption specialist Ram Srinivasan on The Future of Work® Podcast suggest that successful organizations are discovering a common lesson. Whether introducing a new workplace policy or deploying new technology, the human experience of change matters as much as the change itself.

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Leadership Faces a Growing Trust Problem

For decades, leadership books have largely focused on the perspectives of executives, entrepreneurs, and public figures. Matt Bertman took a different approach, examining leadership through the eyes of employees.

His research uncovered significant dissatisfaction with management. In surveys conducted before and after the pandemic, employees reported increasingly negative views of their managers. The findings suggest that many workers feel disconnected from leadership and believe their concerns are not being adequately addressed.

The results also point to a growing expectation gap. Employees increasingly want leaders who communicate clearly, listen actively, and understand the realities of modern work. Traditional management approaches that rely heavily on authority or oversight appear less effective in environments where trust and engagement have become critical to retention.

The challenge for organizations is that leadership quality now influences how employees respond to nearly every major workplace initiative.

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The Return-to-Office Debate Is Really About Employee Buy-In

The same trust issues appear in the ongoing debate over return-to-office policies.

According to Nick Bloom’s research, many organizations continue to struggle with rigid office attendance requirements because employees do not always see a compelling reason behind them. When workers perceive policies as disconnected from the realities of their jobs, compliance often becomes inconsistent.

Bloom notes that workplace preferences vary considerably across demographics and job functions. Younger employees may value office environments for mentorship, learning opportunities, and social interaction. Employees with families often place greater value on flexibility and reduced commuting time. Older workers may have entirely different preferences.

These differences make one-size-fits-all mandates difficult to sustain.

Many organizations have ultimately settled on hybrid arrangements because they provide a balance between flexibility and in-person collaboration. Hybrid models recognize that employees often want both autonomy and connection. They value the ability to work remotely while still maintaining relationships with colleagues and managers.

The lesson extends beyond office attendance. Employees are more likely to support workplace policies when they understand the reasoning behind them and believe their needs have been considered.

AI Adoption Is a People Challenge Before It Is a Technology Challenge

The same dynamic is now emerging in AI initiatives. Many organizations approach AI primarily as a technology deployment, focusing on tools, infrastructure, and technical capabilities. According to Ram Srinivasan, this perspective overlooks the factor that often determines success or failure: employee acceptance.

Workers frequently approach AI with uncertainty, particularly when they fear job displacement or do not understand how new systems will affect their roles. Without clear communication and thoughtful change management, resistance can quickly undermine implementation efforts.

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Organizations that achieve stronger adoption rates tend to focus first on business problems and employee outcomes rather than the technology itself. They invest in education, communication, and training while helping employees understand how AI can support their work rather than replace it.

This human-centered approach has become increasingly important as AI moves from experimentation to enterprise-wide deployment.

One Workplace Challenge, Three Different Forms

Leadership, hybrid work, and AI may appear to be separate issues, but they increasingly reflect the same organizational challenge.

Employees want leaders they trust, they want workplace policies that make sense, and they want technology initiatives that address real business needs while considering their concerns.

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Organizations that succeed in these areas tend to focus less on mandates and more on engagement. They communicate clearly, explain decisions, and involve employees in the process of change.

As companies continue navigating workplace transformation, the most important skill may not be managing technology or designing policies — it may be understanding how people experience change.

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Emma Ascott

Emma Ascott

Emma Ascott is the Associate Editor for Allwork.Space, based in Phoenix, Arizona. She covers the future of work, labor news, and flexible workplace trends. She graduated from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University, and has written for Arizona PBS as well as a multitude of publications.

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