Nearly one year after ChatGPT burst into the public consciousness,
generative AI (GenAI) has left employees and their organizations both
excited and uneasy. According to a recent study commissioned by
Betterworks and conducted by Propeller Insights, over half of employees
are using GenAI at work for complex activities and believe it has the
potential to reduce bias across a swath of HR processes, despite the
fact that only 41% of organizations are actively evaluating it or have
made GenAI a priority. At the same time, many employees are concerned
about the potential impact of GenAI on both their roles and the
possibility of unintentional amplification of bias.
Betterworks surveyed more than 1,000 US employees across 20
industries. Fielded in late October 2023, the survey represents
respondents at all levels within organizations, with 60% having director
titles and above.
"We wanted to understand how C-suites across the country are thinking
about and responding to GenAI," said Doug Dennerline, CEO of
Betterworks. "Are businesses embracing the opportunity and actively
exploring ways to become more efficient and data-driven? And how do
their workforces feel - what excites them, what concerns them, and have
they already started using it to do their work? At Betterworks, we
believe that GenAI will make people and organizations far more
productive and innovative, as well as simplify and enhance performance
management."
Key findings
The survey findings serve as a wake-up call for C-suites that must get ahead of the GenAI trend:
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Employees are using GenAI at work for high-level tasks regardless of their company's position on it.
Top uses include strategic work, idea generation/brainstorming, simple
writing tasks, and technical work. Companies should establish usage
guidelines to avoid the very real threat of having their business
intelligence inadvertently used to train open-source AI models.
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Employees want to hear from HR because they're split on AI's impact.
Nearly half say AI can make their jobs easier and more efficient, while
almost a quarter expect negative impacts. Better communication about
the impact of AI is essential.
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AI promises greater fairness and inclusiveness, but it's not perfect. Sixty-one
percent of employees believe GenAI will promote a more fair and
inclusive workplace by reducing bias in HR processes such as performance
reviews, recruitment, training and development, feedback, and career
conversations. However, 57% are concerned GenAI could unintentionally
introduce and perpetuate bias due to factors such as historically biased
data and difficulty understanding the complexity of AI decisions.
Employees want their organizations to establish clear guidelines, be
transparent, conduct regular algorithm audits, and have diverse AI
development teams to ensure that AI used in HR remains fair and
unbiased.
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AI will elevate fairness in performance reviews and improve DEI. Nearly
three-quarters of respondents think that GenAI can lead to more
effective and unbiased performance evaluations by removing age bias,
gender bias, and prejudice. Many also believe that AI can help create a
more diverse workforce by identifying high-potential employees from
underrepresented groups.
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AI + human intelligence is necessary for removing bias while incorporating human judgment in performance reviews:
75% of employees would say "yes" to this combination. When AI serves as
a co-pilot with a human retaining ultimate control, the partnership
promotes efficiency, fairness and trust.
Read the full report:
To access the complete report, visit Betterworks' website.