As you’re reading this, I’m on my way to Atlanta for the second-annual Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit—and sifting through an inbox full of studies about AI’s effect on work.
The findings are sobering. Despite record AI investment, 78% of organizations have seen AI projects fail or remain stuck in pilots, according to a report by workforce planning platform Orgvue. Workers are also sending mixed signals about AI. More than a third say they accept AI-generated responses as-is or after only a quick check, while more than half say they trust colleagues more than AI, according to new SurveyMonkey data.
It’s clear that no employer (or employee) has an AI strategy fully figured out. That’s why we’ll be digging into this very topic, among others, at the Workplace Innovation Summit this week. Anthropic chief people officer Hannah Pritchett will discuss how companies can deploy AI agents to reallocate responsibilities and build more productive teams. Indeed Chief Economist Svenja Gudell will unpack what labor-market data reveals about AI’s effect on jobs, skills, and hiring—and how employers and workers are responding through automation, reskilling, and redesigned roles.
The Summit will also look beyond AI, with a debate on whether the tried-and-true performance review is broken, as well as conversations on how to navigate the new era of salary transparency, and the leadership practices that create cultures of sustained innovation. I’ll sit down with Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Chair Andrea Lucas for an inside look at how the administration is redefining workplace equality and what employers should expect as legal, political, and cultural pressures collide.
We’ll close with Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens, who will share how the city is leveraging the FIFA World Cup to drive economic growth—and what business leaders can learn about competing for talent, investing in infrastructure, and building stronger public-private partnerships.
Follow along via our livestream here, Fortune.com, and Fortune’s social channels tomorrow and Wednesday. And to those I’ll be meeting in person this week—see you in Atlanta!
Editor’s note: Due to the upcoming Monday holiday, a special edition of next week’s newsletter will land in your inboxes Tuesday morning.
Kristin Stoller
Editorial Director, Fortune Live Media
kristin.stoller@fortune.com
Around the Table
A round-up of the most important HR headlines.
What’s the most layoff-proof tech job in the age of AI? Mid- and senior-level engineers. Wall Street Journal
Employers including Deloitte and Zoom are cutting family-friendly benefits—and here’s why. New York Times
Could keeping a detailed log of how you use your time actually be the secret to productivity? Bloomberg
Watercooler
Everything you need to know from Fortune.
Burnout blues. More than half of U.S. workers are too mentally drained to search for a new job. —Nick Lichtenberg
Entrepreneur nation. The side hustle strikes again: Under-employed Americans are turning to them to make ends meet. —Eleanor Pringle
AI job boom. As AI threatens office jobs, Blackstone’s COO says it’s also creating thousands of high-paying trades jobs. —Preston Fore
EXCLUSIVE: Fortune Editor-in-Chief Alyson Shontell spoke with President Donald Trump last week in a wide-ranging interview. Read the story, published this morning, here: An hour in the Oval Office with the CEO-in-Chief, President Trump
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