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The scariest thing about AI might be the way your boss is talking about it
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文章探讨了人工智能(AI)对职场的影响,尤其关注了公司CEO们对AI的看法及其可能带来的影响。一些CEO对AI持悲观态度,预测其将大规模取代白领工作。然而,专家认为,这种过于悲观的言论可能适得其反,损害员工士气和生产力。文章强调了在AI时代,CEO们需要采取平衡的沟通方式,既要诚实地谈论变革,又要帮助员工积极应对。此外,文章也提到了关于AI对就业影响的实际情况,以及为应对AI变革,员工需要做的准备。

🗣️ **CEO们的担忧与警示:** 部分CEO对AI持悲观态度,预测AI将大规模取代白领工作,并减少就业机会。例如,Fiverr的CEO在邮件中警告员工AI将影响所有职业。Anthropic和Klarna等公司的负责人也表达了类似的悲观预测。

📈 **AI在职场中的应用与影响:** 越来越多的公司开始采用AI。根据麦肯锡的调查,2024年78%的员工表示他们的组织至少在一个职能部门使用了AI,高于2023年的55%。然而,过度悲观的言论可能导致员工士气低落和生产力下降,甚至可能导致员工离职率上升。

⚖️ **平衡沟通与积极应对:** 专家建议CEO们应采取平衡的沟通方式,诚实地谈论AI带来的变革,同时帮助员工积极应对。这包括提供培训、资源和精神支持。例如,Lattice的CEO Sarah Franklin 认为领导者需要负责任地将AI引入劳动力。

Some CEOs are talking about AI like it's the job apocalypse, which experts say risks freaking people out.

CEOs sending scary AI memos to employees may be doing more harm than good.

In recent months, some company leaders have gone public with strikingly bleak outlooks, predicting generative AI tools like OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Gemini will displace wide swaths of white-collar workers and shrink job opportunities for recent college graduates.

"It does not matter if you are a programmer, designer, project manager, data scientist, lawyer, customer support rep, salesperson, or a finance person — AI is coming for you," wrote the CEO and founder of the freelance-job site Fiverr in an email to employees that he shared on LinkedIn.

Other company chiefs, including the bosses of chatbot maker Anthropic and payments provider Klarna, have voiced similarly grim employment forecasts tied to the AI surge.

"This is unusual," Johnny Taylor, president of the Society for Human Resource Management, told Business Insider, noting that chief executives aren't typically so forthcoming or pessimistic. "But AI is unusual. There is going to be a fundamental shift in how work will be done."

AI adoption kicks up

Last year, 78% of workers said their organizations had used AI in at least one function, up from 55% in 2023, according to an AI-focused survey, released in March, by the global management consulting firm McKinsey.

Companies' rapid adoption of AI is putting CEO communication to the test. While transparency is key to building trust with employees, leadership experts say telegraphing expectations of doom and gloom, no matter how sincere, can sink morale and hamper productivity.

As an employee "you're using so much cognitive and emotional resources to deal with that threat," said Cary Cherniss, a professor at Rutgers University who studies emotional intelligence in the workplace.

Increased turnover is another likely outcome. "If everybody is nervous about their jobs, they're going to start looking for other jobs," he said.

AI's arrival in the workplace coincides with a sharp decline in employee confidence. Last month, the share of workers reporting a positive six-month business outlook fell to 44.1% from 48.2% a year earlier, setting a new record low last recorded in February, according to the careers platform Glassdoor.

In times of great uncertainty and agitation, voices of fear and panic about AI can add to the unrest and increase anxiety, said Heidi Brooks, a senior lecturer in organizational behavior at Yale University's School of Management.

"People's nervous systems are already so defensive and jacked up," she said.

Striking a balance

Still, company bosses shouldn't stay entirely mum if they truly anticipate major AI-driven disruption, according to Chris Yeh, a general partner at Blitzscaling Ventures and who co-authored two books about startup leadership with LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman.

"Some jobs will likely be endangered," he said.

The best approach, leadership experts said, is for CEOs to strike a balance by being honest about what changes they foresee while helping employees respond constructively.

"The thing that leaders need to really understand is that you need to responsibly bring AI into the workforce," said Sarah Franklin, CEO of Lattice, a people-management platform.

Balanced communication alone, though, may not be enough. Company leaders may also need to equip employees with training, resources and moral support, said SHRM's Taylor. "We're seeing more and more companies doing that," he said.

Prediction follies

Gary Rich, founder of executive-leadership firm Rich Leadership, suggests company chiefs talk about AI to employees like how they talk to Wall Street analysts.

"You don't make stuff up and you don't speculate," he said.

Making an accurate prediction about a seemingly transformative technology isn't easy anyway and can cause reputational harm, added Rich. History is littered with faulty forecasts, such as how people once thought television would replace radio and that e-commerce would kill bricks-and-mortar retail.

"Ultimately, it erodes their own credibility when they're wrong," he said.

AI's actual impact on employment has so far been mixed. Last year 13% of CEOs polled by professional-services firm PricewaterhouseCoopers said they reduced their headcounts due to generative AI over the previous 12 months, while 17% attributed the technology to increases in their workforces during that period.

Melissa Valentine, a senior fellow at Stanford University who studies enterprise usage of AI, said workers should consider getting up to speed on how the technology applies to their field given how prominent and widespread it's become. But there's no need to panic as AI isn't going to change how most companies operate overnight.

"It takes a ton of work to automate agents," she said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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