The AI Quiet Quitters
Shadow AI was the story for a while – workers sneaking ChatGPT past IT, doing in minutes what used to take hours, running an underground productivity movement from their personal accounts (or simply freeing up more time to watch TikTok). Management called it a governance problem. Workers called it getting the job done. It felt, in a strange way, like good news (just like the good old days when we all brought our personal Dropbox accounts to the workplace as we were sick and tired of 1980s SharePoint).
That era has quietly ended. A new global survey of 3,750 executives and employees across 14 countries finds that more than 54% of workers bypassed their company’s AI tools in the past 30 days and completed the work manually instead – and another 33% haven’t used AI at all. Eight in ten enterprise workers are avoiding the technology their employers are spending record sums to deploy. Shadow AI has become the AI no-show show.
Now the data tells a different story. The tool that workers once raced to adopt covertly has become, for a large and growing share of the workforce, the tool they’ve stopped using altogether. Not because it doesn’t work. Because they’re afraid of what happens when it works too well.
The piece also surfaces a huge trust gap: only 9% of workers trust AI for complex, business-critical decisions, compared to 61% of executives – a 52-point chasm. Executives and employees are, as the report puts it, describing fundamentally different companies. The fear of obsolescence – FOBO, fear of becoming obsolete – has apparently crossed the threshold from anxiety into active avoidance. Which is, if you think about it, a perfectly rational response to a completely irrational situation.