AI adoption outpaces training, 71% professionals expect role shifts: Report
There is a sharp gap between AI adoption and training, as employees brace for rapidly evolving job responsibilities, the report by Genius HRTech said
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One of the clearest gaps identified by the report is training.
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Artificial Intelligence (AI) adoption at workplaces is outpacing corporate training programmes, with 71 per cent of professionals believing their roles will change over the next few years as new tools and workflows become mainstream, according to a report.
There is a sharp gap between AI adoption and training, as employees brace for rapidly evolving job responsibilities, the report by Genius HRTech said.
The Genius HRTech and Digipoll report is based on an online survey conducted among 1,704 professionals across sectors in November 2025.
One of the clearest gaps identified by the report is training, with a substantial 61 per cent of respondents saying their organisation has not provided adequate guidance on effective AI usage, while only 37 per cent reported receiving proper training.
This lack of structured support appears to influence how employees perceive AI adoption within their functions, as 55 per cent believe AI adoption is driven by necessity, whereas 37 per cent feel it is trend-driven rather than need-based, the report said.
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It also found a deeper shift in workforce expectations, with 71 per cent of respondents believing that their role or responsibilities will significantly change in the next 2-3 years due to AI integration, reflecting both anticipation and uncertainty.
According to the report, 67 per cent of respondents have already started using AI tools to simplify or automate their daily work, showing how quickly the technology is being adopted across roles.
This shift isn't completely smooth, as 69 per cent of respondents said that AI has made their work processes simpler, but 25 per cent felt it has added complexity, suggesting that even though AI cuts down on repetitive tasks, it can also create new challenges for some employees, the report showed.
Trust remains a significant barrier, with only 49 per cent of professionals saying that they trust AI-generated insights without manual cross-verification, 36 per cent do not trust them, and 15 per cent argued that trust varies depending on the task.
"AI is no longer a distant concept, but it's now shaping daily workflows across industries. While professionals value the efficiency it brings, they also expect companies to equip them with the right training and clarity. The future workplace will thrive only when human intelligence and AI complement each other, not compete," Genius HRTech chairman and managing director RP Yadav said.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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First Published: Jan 18 2026 | 2:16 PM IST