How's Ai adoption really going in big non-technical companies? Is it really transformational or is it just management BS?

Reddit r/AI_Agents News

Summary

A worker at a FTSE100 company expresses frustration over AI adoption challenges, noting that despite pressure to use AI, the company struggles with basic data quality and user adoption, and questions if the transformation will actually happen.

I work in a FTSE100 company (not tech) and we are pushed to use Ai however other than copilot rollout I don't feel like this transformation is gonna happen anytime soon. We already struggle with getting people to look at dashboards and maintain data quality how the f&#k are we gonna deploy agents and automate stuff. This is really annoying me and management doesn't seem to realise this. Anyone else experience the same? Maybe some success or failures? Other than writing emails and summarising meetings, helping with excel formulas etc, what else you really do with it?
Original Article

Similar Articles

Agentic AI in Big Tech and Enterprise

Reddit r/AI_Agents

A firsthand perspective from an enterprise R&D manager on the realities of AI adoption in large companies, highlighting gaps between executive expectations and actual productivity improvements, and the challenges of getting teams to use AI tools effectively.

Companies are letting AI gains go to waste, study says

Reddit r/artificial

A BCG study finds that 74% of non-managerial white-collar workers regularly use AI, saving at least a day per week, but many companies struggle to convert efficiency gains into measurable value.

Fascinating research on ai adoption in businesses.

Reddit r/ArtificialInteligence

A Writer.com survey reveals that 44% of Gen Z employees admit to sabotaging their company's AI strategy, while 60% of companies plan to lay off workers who cannot or will not use AI, highlighting a growing divide between AI elite and resistant employees.