Popular workplace habit is stopping your colleagues from trusting you
Share and Follow

Using AI at work is destroying trust in the workplace, a new study has found. 

Workers think bosses who use AI to communicate with them are lazy and don’t care, according to a new University of Florida survey. 

More than 75 percent of workers are now using artificial intelligent chatbots such as ChatGPT in their day-to-day work, according to the study.

These chatbots can quickly respond to inquiries and offer insights, details, and advice, utilizing large language models (LLM) that gather and reapply internet data.  

Another recent study found that it is men that are far more likely to adopt AI in the workplace too.  

Experts have highlighted that although AI can assist in drafting professional memos for staff, its use can undermine trust within the workplace hierarchy. 

Research conducted by Anthony Coman and Peter Cardon found that employees were open to AI assistance for basic tasks like grammar correction, but saw extensive AI usage as indicative of a lack of consideration and reliability. 

However, Kelly Siegel, CEO of IT company National Technology Management, said that there was still some ‘fearmongering’ around using AI in workplace communications.

Men are more likely to use AI in the workplace than women, a recent study found

Men are more likely to use AI in the workplace than women, a recent study found

‘People confuse the tool with the outcome,’ Siegel told the Daily Mail.

‘Authenticity doesn’t come from whether you typed every word yourself. It comes from whether your message aligns with your values.’

‘I don’t see AI eroding trust long-term, quite the opposite. When applied with empathy and discipline, it frees leaders to spend less time formatting words and more time leading humans.’ 

Using AI to craft personal or motivational messages degraded trust most, according to workers polled in the study. 

Researchers also found that there was a ‘perception gap’ where AI users think their messages are more professional but the recipients can spot that the tech has been used. This undermines ‘sincerity, integrity, and leadership ability.’

However Coman and Cardon found that there was ‘a tension between perceptions of message quality and perceptions of the sender.’ 

They explained: ‘Overall, professionals view their own AI use leniently, yet they are more skeptical of the same levels of assistance when used by supervisors.’

‘Despite positive impressions of professionalism in AI-assisted writing, managers who use AI for routine communication tasks put their trustworthiness at risk when using medium-to-high-levels of AI assistance.’  

Kelly Siegel, CEO of IT company National Technology Management thinks AI still has use in workplace communications

Kelly Siegel, CEO of IT company National Technology Management thinks AI still has use in workplace communications 

Regular use of AI tools can undermine trust between managers and their employees

Regular use of AI tools can undermine trust between managers and their employees 

Workers were asked to evaluate AI-written messages of congratulations, both for the perception of the message and how it made them feel about the sender. 

Around half of employees viewed supervisors as sincere when they used high levels of AI. 

By comparison 83 percent saw low-assistance messages as still sincere. 

‘The findings reveal employees can often detect AI-generated content and interpret its use as laziness or lack of caring,’ the researchers wrote. 

The latest study comes as AI continues to rip through the workforce, changing the ways we work and destroying thousands of jobs. 

A recent report from career advice firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas found that the relentless march of AI and the knock-on effects of Trump’s tariff policies were the biggest factors in layoffs so far this year.  

The study found that layoffs have risen 140 percent from a year ago, a new report reveals. 

Companies have already announced more than 800,000 job cuts this year alone, the highest since the pandemic upended the economy in 2020. 

Share and Follow
You May Also Like
US to strip Colombian president Gustavo Petro's visa

U.S. Plans to Revoke Visa for Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro

The United States is planning to revoke the visa of Colombian President…
Who is Anibal Hernandez Santana, accused in ABC station shooting and note saying Trump officials are 'next'

Who is Anibal Hernandez Santana, accused in ABC station shooting and note saying Trump officials are ‘next’

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Authorities allege a man…
Kim Kardashian is outshone by daughter North West, 12, at SKIMS event

North West, 12, Steals the Spotlight from Kim Kardashian at SKIMS Event

Kim Kardashian made a splash with her outfit at her NikeSKIMS store launch…
Robert Barnett, influential DC lawyer to politicians and journalists, dies at 79

Robert Barnett, influential DC lawyer to politicians and journalists, dies at 79

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Robert Barnett, a powerhouse…
Some comics blast Riyadh Comedy Festival over Saudi rights abuses

Comedians Critique Riyadh Comedy Festival Amid Concerns Over Saudi Human Rights Issues

(The Hill) – Several U.S. comedians are blasting the star-studded Riyadh Comedy…
DA Bragg's office drops case against woman who allegedly sucker-punched pro-life activist

DA Bragg’s office drops case against woman who allegedly sucker-punched pro-life activist

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! A woman accused of…
Kate Middleton gives shout out to England before the Women's Rugby World Cup win

Kate Middleton Cheers on England Ahead of Women’s Rugby World Cup Victory

Kate Middleton cheered on England during the final game of the 2025…
5 questions experts have about Trump's pharma tariffs 

Five Questions Experts Are Asking About Trump’s Pharmaceutical Tariffs

For people who rely on certain prescription drugs, including weight loss, asthma…