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AI Adoption Is Funding Itself Through Labor Cuts, Not Productivity Gains image

AI Adoption Is Funding Itself Through Labor Cuts, Not Productivity Gains

E1930 · Business of Tech
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The deployment of artificial intelligence across the business sector is introducing structural margin pressure rather than delivering the promised productivity dividend. Rather than self-funding through measurable efficiency gains, AI investments are currently being financed through compensation cuts, organizational tightening, and heightened performance expectations, as evidenced by data from ActivTrak, Gallup, Novoresume, and ResumeBuilder. This shift positions AI less as a driver of output and more as a cost-cutting measure embedded in software spending.

Concrete developments show that, according to ActivTrak analysis, time spent on email and messaging has increased after AI adoption, while uninterrupted focus time has declined. Gallup data confirms that about 40% of employees use AI tools, though only a fraction leverage them effectively. Novoresume’s survey reveals that although half of AI users report completing tasks more quickly, much of the saved time is not reinvested in productive output, and over half of respondents believe they could perform their roles at a similar level without AI involvement.

Supporting evidence from Jobs for the Future identifies significant worker skepticism and low readiness, with only 36% of employees feeling equipped to use AI effectively and 44% viewing AI as a net negative for jobs and quality of life. Further, Snowflake’s findings indicate that organizations are adjusting headcount to fill new skill gaps while eliminating overlapping functions. Inside the channel, ConnectWise observes that larger MSPs and VARs are curtailing compensation increases and relying on AI as a headcount management lever, exacerbating delivery expectations as evidenced in the Resume Builder findings.

The operational consequences for MSPs and IT service providers are clear: organizations can no longer treat AI as a simple add-on. Providers face heightened expectations to deliver measurable outcomes—such as enhanced ticket resolution or lower escalation rates—despite constrained labor resources and ongoing workflow disruption. Without system-level productivity proof, procurement may preemptively reduce service spend. Effective risk management now requires auditing AI deployments for verifiable workflow changes, embedding measurable AI outcomes in QBRs, and treating workflow redesign and user training not as optional extras but as necessary, billable services.

00:00 Busier With AI

03:05 AI Outpaces Workers

05:33 MSP Squeeze

07:46 Why Do We Care? 

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