Connect with us
LIVE

Business

From ‘fear factor’ to ‘cognitive fatigue’: KPMG principal on the quarter when everyone started thinking about AI differently

Published

on

AI agent deployment in major U.S. organizations has entered a period of hyper-growth, with workplace culture and management strategies evolving just as rapidly, according to the latest KPMG Q3 2025 AI Quarterly Pulse survey. In just six months, the share of organizations with deployed artificial intelligence (AI) agents quadrupled from 11% to 42%, according to the survey of 130 U.S.-based C-suite and business leaders representing organizations with annual revenue of $1 billion or more.

At the same time, according to Rahsaan Shears, principal and aIQ program lead at KPMG US, the third quarter is when people’s approach to the technology fundamentally shifted. The “fear factor” was gone as more people actually worked with these tools, she said, and in its place a “cognitive fatigue” emerged. Echoing this sentiment, the KPMG report highlights a dramatic drop in employee resistance—from 47% last quarter to just 21% now. Over half of the workforce now either accepts or actively embraces AI agents. Technology departments lead the charge, with 95% reporting agent usage for productivity gains, followed closely by operations and risk management.

The ‘human in the loop’ is reassuring—and exhausting

Shears said C-suite leaders are telling her that as more and more workers have engaged with the technology, either through enterprise tools or participating in a proof of concept by their organization, “they can see where it’s an enabler.” But based on its maturity, it isn’t in a place where it can entirely replace human workers. There needs to be “a human in the loop or a human on the loop.”

A defining insight from Spears is the changing relationship between humans and AI at work. Spears describes the technology as “a toddler”—capable of impressive feats yet still immature and requiring context, guidance, and oversight. “It’s not a toddler in all fields—software development, for instance, it’s much more advanced. But for most enterprise uses, it still needs human intervention, she observed.

This ongoing need for human skills, Spears believes, has made employees more comfortable with AI, seeing it as a tool that enables rather than replaces them. “That persistent need for human engagement, I think people have found that comforting,” Spears said, emphasizing the unique skills now required: critical thinking, questioning, and adaptability. She said she believes “Renaissance skills” will be increasingly important, but clarified that it doesn’t mean the workforce will be full of poetry graduates, but “the art of thinking, the art of questioning” will be crucial for being the human in the loop.

When asked if people have found that AI tools are bad or don’t produce a return on investment, Shears said people went from having an expectation that AI would be just as good at work as someone with lots of experience to understanding that, while it can go much faster than humans at many things, like a toddler, it can cause a lot of damage without close supervision.

Rethinking success and ROI in the AI era

Both KPMG and Spears argue that traditional business metrics are insufficient to capture AI’s transformative impact. According to the survey, 78% of leaders say conventional KPIs miss much of AI’s value. Spears said the same is true of ROI and the much-publicized failure of many AI pilots to achieve it. “I believe that the traditional measures that we’ve looked for are not going to tell us the full story because we’re never going to go to a very lengthy analysis because we don’t know how to measure necessarily all the right indicators. I’m very interested and intrigued about how this is going to come to fruition,” she said, adding that KPMG was looking at a broad array of signals to evaluate AI results.

KPMG’s data reflects this shift—organizational leaders are now tracking productivity (97%), profitability (94%), and quality improvements (91%) as evidence of AI’s business impact, even as broader enterprise outcomes continue to evolve.

Toward a new kind of workforce

Workforce transformation is now firmly underway, with Spears seeing hope especially for entry-level workers who are “digital first,” yet now face higher expectations for skepticism, critical thinking, and adaptable reasoning.

When asked if this will reshape how entry-level work feels and looks, Spears said it’s nuanced, because she’s observed a propensity among younger workers, raised on social media and constant iPhone access, to “trust” their devices and technology. In the case of AI, because it’s “more early in its maturity, they need to be more skeptical, which is a different kind of relationship than they historically had from a digital interaction perspective.” This coincides with KPMG’s finding that 56% of leaders expect to reshape entry-level recruiting within the year. When asked if employers need to rethink entry-level work to be less menial and more critically oriented, Spears replied that it’s already happening: “We’re seeing it.”

Advertisement
Fortune Global Forum returns Oct. 26–27, 2025 in Riyadh. CEOs and global leaders will gather for a dynamic, invitation-only event shaping the future of business. Apply for an invitation.

Source link

Title

This industrial giant is emerging as a big AI play, says Wells Fargo This industrial giant is emerging as a big AI play, says Wells Fargo
Crypto4 months ago

This industrial giant is emerging as a big AI play, says Wells Fargo

  Wells Fargo sees Caterpillar continuing to roar higher, emerging as an artificial intelligence play. The bank initiated shares of...

Novo Nordisk's strategy tested as investors push back on board revamp Novo Nordisk's strategy tested as investors push back on board revamp
Crypto4 months ago

Novo Nordisk’s strategy tested as investors push back on board revamp

    Flags with the logos of Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk, maker of the blockbuster diabetes and weight-loss treatments Ozempic...

Alibaba plans AI subscriptions, stablecoin-like payments with JPMorgan Alibaba plans AI subscriptions, stablecoin-like payments with JPMorgan
Crypto4 months ago

Alibaba plans AI subscriptions, stablecoin-like payments with JPMorgan

  Key Points Alibaba plans to use “tokenization” of payments for cross-border transactions in its business-to-business arm. Kuo Zhang, president...

Abraham Lincoln set off an education revolution in 1862 with the Land Grant Act. We need the same thing today for AI Abraham Lincoln set off an education revolution in 1862 with the Land Grant Act. We need the same thing today for AI
Crypto4 months ago

UK borrowing costs spike on report government to scrap plans to raise income tax

    Rachel Reeves, U.K. chancellor of the exchequer, delivers a speech in London, UK, on Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025. Bloomberg...

An Indonesian Unicorn's Vision For Digital Payments An Indonesian Unicorn's Vision For Digital Payments
Crypto4 months ago

Trump’s threatened the BBC with a $1B lawsuit: Here’s what’s going on

    US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters as he arrives at Palm Beach International Airport on Oct. 31,...

We're downgrading a portfolio stock. Plus, what's causing the market's rally We're downgrading a portfolio stock. Plus, what's causing the market's rally
Crypto4 months ago

UBS’s picks for global returns next year

  Investors looking for global diversification opportunities should look to a specific subset of stocks in Europe, according to UBS...

Nvidia will soar nearly 75%, says Loop Capital Nvidia will soar nearly 75%, says Loop Capital
News4 months ago

AI companies admit they’re worried about a bubble

    Eakarat Buanoi | Istock | Getty Images LISBON, Portugal — Top tech executives told CNBC they’re concerned about...

CEO Southeast Asia's top bank DBS says AI adoption already paying off CEO Southeast Asia's top bank DBS says AI adoption already paying off
News4 months ago

CEO Southeast Asia’s top bank DBS says AI adoption already paying off

Tan Su Shan, deputy chief executive officer and managing director of institutional banking at DBS Group Holdings Ltd., speaks during...

China's economic slowdown deepens in October as housing slump worsens and investments shrink more than expected China's economic slowdown deepens in October as housing slump worsens and investments shrink more than expected
News4 months ago

China’s economic slowdown deepens in October as housing slump worsens and investments shrink more than expected

CHENGDU, CHINA – OCTOBER 18: People walk past the Louis Vuitton store at Taikoo Li, a high-end shopping area that...

U.S. to remove tariffs on some products from Ecuador, Argentina, Guatemala and El Salvador U.S. to remove tariffs on some products from Ecuador, Argentina, Guatemala and El Salvador
News4 months ago

U.S. to remove tariffs on some products from Ecuador, Argentina, Guatemala and El Salvador

The United States said Thursday it will remove tariffs on some foods and other imports from Argentina, Ecuador, Guatemala and...

Advertisement