Potential enterprise uses of artificial intelligence and generative AI have garnered plenty of attention in recent months. AI is the next business game-changer, but if employees don’t trust what it can do and how it’s being implemented, your transformation efforts will stall. That’s why it’s important to pay attention to the human side of the equation—and Workday CFO Zane Rowe sees an opportunity for finance leaders to bridge that AI trust gap.
“If you think about the opportunity that AI presents to everybody, it’s quite significant—and there’s a lot of excitement at the corporate level and at the leadership level,” he said in a recent interview at the 2024 World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland. “But what the research highlighted, and maybe not unexpectedly, is a gap between leaders and corporate sponsors versus the average individual at a company.”
Rowe cited the Workday 2024 global study “Closing the AI Trust Gap.” Commissioned by Workday and conducted by FT Longitude, the survey of 1,375 business leaders and 4,000 employees across the globe found that:
- 62% of business leaders (C-suite or their direct reports) welcome AI, and 52% of employees expressed the same sentiment
- 23% of employees lack confidence that their organization puts employee interests above its own when implementing AI
- 70% of business leaders agree AI should be developed in a way that allows for human review and intervention
For Rowe, the study’s findings present an opportunity for organizations to improve their relationship with employees.
“It warrants companies really understanding what that opportunity is for them, but then doing a good job and explaining that to the workforce,” he said.
The role of a CFO has always centered on data and numbers, as well as how that data is compiled and used to produce forecasts and financial reports, Rowe said. Technology, he added, holds the promise of greater efficiency and productivity, as well as value creation.