I recently read an insightful
article by Johnny C. Taylor Jr., CEO of Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM), about the widening AI skills gap and what organizations must do now to prepare their workforce for the future.
Taylor made an important point:
organizations can no longer rely solely on hiring external talent to close capability gaps. Instead, leaders must invest in developing the people they already have.I agree.
But I believe there’s another gap emerging that leaders cannot afford to ignore. That is,
the emotional readiness gap. AI transformation is not just a technology shift. It’s a human shift. Employees are not only learning new tools. They are navigating uncertainty, pressure, fear, and constant change at a pace many organizations underestimated.
For years, workplace conversations around AI focused on job loss. Now the conversation has shifted towards upskilling, reskilling, and efficiency. At least there is progress.
But in many organizations, employees are quietly asking themselves different questions:
Will I still be relevant?
Can I keep up?
What if I fall behind?
How do I learn all of this while I’m already overwhelmed?Those questions matter because burnout doesn’t only come from working too hard. It also comes from prolonged uncertainty, lack of control, unclear expectations, and nonstop adaptation.
And managers are carrying a tremendous amount of that pressure.
Today’s managers are expected to:
- lead teams through rapid change
- maintain productivity
- learn new AI tools themselves
- calm employee anxiety
- reinforce culture and connection
- and somehow prevent burnout, all at the same time
That requires far more than technical training.
It requires a high degree of emotionally intelligent leadership.
One of the most important distinctions in Johnny Taylor’s article was this idea:
Training is not the same as development.This point deserves more attention.
Many organizations approach AI adoption as a one-time learning event, characterized by:
Here’s the new tool.
Watch this webinar.
Complete this course.But it’s not that simple, is it? Behavior change or new tool adoption don’t happen from information alone.
Real development requires:
- reinforcement
- practice
- feedback
- psychological safety
- and time to build confidence
Without those elements, organizations risk creating what I call
AI Burnout.Employees are asked to learn faster, adapt faster, produce faster, and absorb constant change without removing other pressures from their workload.
That’s not transformation. That’s exhaustion. And exhaustion is one of the key causes and symptoms of burnout.
The organizations that will thrive in the age of AI are not simply the ones with the most advanced technology.
They will be the organizations that combine:
- AI capability
- emotionally intelligent managers and practices
- human connection
- purpose-driven culture
- and sustainable support systems for employees
People still want to feel valued.
They still want to belong.
They still want managers who listen, communicate clearly, and help them navigate change with confidence.
AI may help organizations move faster.
But human connection is still what makes people stay.
The future of work will not belong solely to organizations that invest in technology.
It will belong to organizations that invest in humans while technology evolves around them.
That is how we close not only the AI skills gap, but the burnout gap as well.
What is your organization doing to close the AI Skills gap?To learn more about what I can do to help them prepare visit https://www.JaniceLitvin.com/Academy.