There is a consistent gap between what enterprise leaders say about AI deployment and what they actually do.
The language is familiar: “People first.” “Human in the lead.” “AI needs to work for workers.” These phrases appear in strategy decks, town halls, and press releases across nearly every major organization deploying AI.
Then you get on a call with the leaders actually running those deployments, and you hear: “I don’t need input from employees on their workflow reality. I have telemetry. I have process mining. I have task intelligence.”
We trust scraped system data more than the people doing the work. We prefer click-tracking, an echo of what is happening, over asking directly for the actual thing.
When you probe why, two objections come up consistently.
The first: “We can’t burden employees. There’s survey fatigue.” This is real, but it is being misapplied. Survey fatigue is the result of asking people too many questions about things that do not change anything. If you ask workers about the specific workflows they run, what gets in their way, what is improving, what they would change, and then act on the answers, that is not a burden. Workers generally want to be heard on how their work is evolving. The challenge is asking the right things, briefly, and following through.
The second: “Employees aren’t objective. They’re biased.” This one is harder to accept. Workers are the only people who know where work actually breaks down, what they work around daily, and what AI genuinely helps with. For decades, Lean and Kaizen were built on exactly this belief: the people closest to the work are best positioned to improve it. That principle did not stop being true when AI entered the picture.
Yes, some leaders collect AI tool feedback, and some run change readiness surveys. But those center on the technology rather than the workflows workers run through it.
The red thread in effective AI transformation is that you cannot successfully evolve work without involving the people doing it. It happens to be the right thing to do, and it is also the most effective strategy available, because workers hold the map of the work you are trying to redesign.
Closing the say-do gap requires only that you actually ask.
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