change fatigue

AI Adoption Has a Manager Problem

According to Gartner, managers are experimenting with AI at nearly double the rate of their employees. In the same research, 86% of those managers report struggling to drive AI adoption across their teams.

Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

The gap between what organizations deploy and what managers can actually implement with their teams isn’t new—and it isn’t a technology problem. Every major workplace shift of the past decade has run into the same bottleneck. Remote work. Digital transformation. Hybrid models. Restructuring. In each case, organizations invested heavily in the what—the tools, the platforms, the processes—and underinvested in the who: the managers expected to make it all work.

Gartner has recommendations for closing the manager AI gap, and based on our client work, I think they’re spot on. Here are the capabilities your leadership development programs should be building right now and what they look like in action.

Read the Room, Not Just the Roadmap

The best managers don’t apply a one-size-fits-all approach to change. They pay attention to the dynamics on their teams—who is energized, who is anxious, who is quietly resistant and why. That kind of awareness can come only from taking the time to know your people.

This matters more with AI adoption than with almost any previous change initiative. AI touches how people think about their own value and capabilities. Concerns about job security, cognitive decline and the erosion of meaningful work are real—and they show up differently on different teams. A manager who leads purely from the roadmap misses all of that.

Effective development programs should equip managers to tailor their communication and support based on what their people actually need. That means understanding how to have honest conversations about AI’s role, building psychological safety so team members can raise concerns and customizing development in ways that build capability without deepening anxiety or becoming just one more thing to do.

Lead Through the Emotional Side of Change

When people push back on a new tool or process, they’re usually telling you something important—about trust, about workload, about what they fear losing. Managers who treat resistance as an obstacle to manage will miss that signal entirely. Managers who treat it as data will learn something useful.

This is where emotional intelligence becomes indispensable. As I’ve written before, change fatigue is eroding the very leadership capabilities that matter most in uncertain times. When managers are stretched thin—managing their own learning curves on top of their teams’—their emotional reserves run low. That’s when they’re most likely to miss cues, rush past discomfort or default to command-and-control behaviors that undermine trust.

Building resilience and courage in managers is the foundation that makes everything else work. Managers who can stay grounded under pressure, acknowledge the weight of what their teams are carrying and create space for honest conversation are the ones who actually move adoption forward.

Equally important: Managers need to be able to help their teams anchor on purpose. When change feels relentless, people need a clear line of sight into why it matters. Managers who can connect AI adoption to meaningful work—rather than just rolling out the tool—are the ones who bring people along.

Connect the Dots for Leadership

Most managers understand the strategy behind the decisions being made above them. Most of their teams don’t. And the gap between those two realities is where change initiatives often stall.

Communicating value upward—and connecting the dots between organizational strategy and day-to-day work—is a skill that most managers were never explicitly taught. One of the most powerful shifts I've seen in my work with leaders is when they learn to make this connection visible. When a manager can explain not just what is changing, but why it matters, how it connects to the bigger picture and what it means for the people on their team, something changes. Engagement picks up. Resistance softens. Trust builds.

This is also true in the other direction. Managers who can clearly communicate what they’re observing on the ground—what’s working, what isn’t, what their teams need—become invaluable strategic partners to senior leadership.

The Opportunity: Redirecting Freed-Up Capacity

There’s one more piece of the Gartner data I’m paying special attention to. As AI begins to deliver on its efficiency promises, it will free up time and cognitive capacity that currently goes toward routine tasks. So what happens to that capacity?

Left unaddressed, freed-up time tends to get filled with more of the same—more meetings, more administrative work, more reactive noise. The opportunity—and the risk—is significant. If managers aren’t equipped to help their teams redirect that energy toward higher-value work, the productivity gains AI promises will get absorbed rather than realized.

This requires managers who can think strategically about priorities, help their people identify where they can create the most impact and create the conditions for meaningful work to actually happen. That’s not something AI can do for you. It’s exactly what strong managers do.

How We Develop the Managers AI Adoption Needs

Everything Gartner identifies as critical for driving AI adoption—emotional intelligence, change agility, strategic communication, the ability to build trust and influence—is exactly what our products and services were designed to develop.

Take our leadership development platform, New Lens®. It’s built for today's workplace: complex, fast-moving and full of competing demands. It delivers development in the flow of work, scales across entire organizations (not just high-potential cohorts) and builds the human capabilities no AI can replicate.

Our clients use New Lens to equip their managers with the skills to lead through transitions: reading organizational dynamics, communicating with clarity and empathy, building resilience in themselves and others, and connecting strategy to action in ways that actually land.

To learn more about how New Lens and our other solutions can prepare your managers for this moment, request a demo or reach out directly. We'd love to talk.


Don’t wait for performance to drop before taking action. Discover how the New Lens® platform helps organizations support managers with bite-sized, actionable learning—built for today’s fast-paced, high-stress environments.

What Is Change Fatigue and How Can You Address It?

Your leadership team just rolled out the third major initiative this quarter. Your managers are implementing AI tools while navigating return-to-office policies and budget constraints. You’re constantly hearing about change agility and staying competitive. But there’s also an important truth that no one is saying out loud: Your people are exhausted.

This is something all organizations need to be talking about. More than half of HR leaders say employees at their organization are suffering from change fatigue. In another survey, almost three-quarters of respondents said their organizations were maxed out on change, or close to it. 

It’s easy to see why. In just the past five years, we’ve been through a pandemic, seismic political and social changes, the rise of AI and the shift to hybrid work. This level of transformation is not something employees can just shake off and power through. And there’s no end in sight.

When companies contact us about our New Lens® learning platform, building capability in the midst of change fatigue is often one of their biggest concerns. With that in mind, let’s take a closer look at change fatigue and how you can help your employees weather it.

What Does Change Fatigue Look Like?

The Center for Creative Leadership sums it up well: Change fatigue is “a state of exhaustion that occurs when individuals or organizations experience continuous, rapid, or overwhelming changes.”

Change fatigue hits leaders and managers especially hard. After all, they’re not only managing change themselves; they’re also helping their employees through all the disruption. Managers often deliver challenging news about things like layoffs, budget cuts and reorganizations.  They also communicate with their teams about what comes next and what things will be like going forward—all while dealing with their own stress and anxiety.

Reduced drive, motivation and engagement are all signs of change fatigue. You may also notice that employees who used to be advocates of change are now resisting it. Don’t ignore these signals: Left unaddressed, change fatigue can lead to burnout and even physical illness.

Why Is Change Fatigue So Extreme Right Now?

We all have “surge capacity”—mental and physical systems we draw on to get through short-term stress. The problem, though, is that long-term changes keep piling up:

  • At larger companies, leaders manage an average of nine major change initiatives per year. And many of them are ready to throw in the towel: Almost 40% said they would consider walking away rather than lead through another big change.

  • New technologies are emerging at an unprecedented rate, making existing systems and strategies obsolete almost overnight. This constant cycle of innovation creates a perpetual sense of urgency for organizations to keep pace with the latest trends and advancements, leaving little time to reflect and recharge.

  • More than 70% of organizations are dealing with too many changes at once. This overload leads to confusion about where to focus on and makes it harder to implement those changes effectively.

We just don’t have the reserve capacity to carry us through years of ongoing, intense transformation. So there’s a good reason that we all feel like we’re running on empty—we are!

Equip Your People to Handle Change

Change isn’t going to stop. So how can you help your people “refill their tanks”?

  • Anchor on purpose. Korn Ferry identifies “anchoring on purpose” as one of the key principles for building change-ready organizations. Give every employee a clear line of sight into how their work contributes to meaningful goals. When employees understand the “why” behind change, they’re more likely to stay engaged. Learning and growth also contribute to a sense of purpose.

  • Build organizational resilience, not just individual resilience. When organizations actively work to build resilience—connecting individual work to organizational goals, fostering psychological safety, and providing coaching through transitions—they create cultures that can adapt without breaking.

  • Make development more accessible. Traditional approaches to leadership development have focused on a select few high performers. But technology now makes it possible to expand development opportunities so that more of your people can become effective change leaders.

  • Make learning part of every day. Continuous change requires continuous learning, not just one-time trainings. Your people need ways to learn in the flow of work with content that supports strategic outcomes.

  • Clearly communicate. Leaders have to be skilled and emotionally intelligent communicators to enroll others in change. A lack of communication about why a change is happening and what its effects will be leaves people feeling overwhelmed and disengaged.

  • Simplify and prioritize. When handling multiple changes, prioritize the most important changes first, connect the dots to show how different changes work together and pace changes so the organization isn’t trying to do everything at once

  • Build connection into development. Successful transformation requires people who are engaged, motivated and willing to go above and beyond. If your people are feeling checked out, building connections between employees can help. For example, mentoring, coaching and cohort learning can help people connect across levels and departments.

  • Provide genuine support. Amid constant change, employees can feel overwhelmed or unsure of how to perform their roles, which in turn can affect confidence and morale. To address these feelings, foster a culture that celebrates successes, encourages open communication and provides opportunities to take breaks and recharge to avoid burnout.

The Platform That Builds Change-Ready Leaders

As you think about your priorities for 2026, I encourage you to put transformation fatigue on the agenda as a strategic imperative.

New Lens is built for this era of nonstop change. It focuses on the Core Strategies that build essential leadership capabilities like emotional intelligence, resilience, and strong communication. It’s also designed to be scalable, so you can give more employees the tools to manage continuous transformation without burning out. To see New Lens in action, request a demo. And if you have other questions about developing change-ready leaders, just drop me a note.


Don’t wait for performance to drop before taking action. Discover how the New Lens® platform helps organizations support managers with bite-sized, actionable learning—built for today’s fast-paced, high-stress environments.