change management

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.

Leadership Skills for the AI Era

As the new year begins, we’re all hearing a lot about transformation sweeping the world of leadership development. It’s hard to keep track! For a quick overview of the latest research, check out my recent article. And if you're looking for something solid to hold onto amid all this change, here's what I keep coming back to: The timeless fundamentals of leadership still hold true. In fact, I believe that they’re the key factor that determines whether a company will evolve for the AI era or get left in the dust.

So what are these essential skills and capabilities? And how can you identify the specific areas where individual employees need more development? These questions drove the development of our New Lens® learning platform. The answers we discovered are important for every HR and L&D professional to know.

Why Fundamentals Matter Now

After 25 years of coaching executives and designing leadership solutions for Fortune 500 companies, I've watched what holds up when everything else is shifting: the human skills that allow leaders to navigate complexity, inspire teams, and make sound decisions under pressure. These fundamentals matter even more when we're all tired, when change feels relentless, and when it's hard to remember why we got into this work in the first place. Research shows that technology is advancing faster than job roles and skills can keep up, creating what Bersin calls an “AI productivity and skills gap.” The teams and organizations that close this gap are those where managers facilitate experimentation, orchestrate collaboration between humans and AI, and help people redesign work itself.

These capabilities show up across every coaching engagement, custom solution, and development program we design. These aren’t trendy skills that will be obsolete next year. They’re the essential building blocks—proven to get results across industries and economic conditions. And as AI reshapes the workplace, they become even more critical.

Think of it this way: AI is rapidly changing what work gets done and how it gets done. But leadership—the ability to guide people through uncertainty, build trust, and align efforts toward meaningful goals—is more human than ever.

Essential Skills for Leading Through AI Transformation

Here are the fundamental leadership capabilities that organizations need right now. Each reflects what we’re seeing and learning as we work alongside leaders navigating AI transformation—through coaching, scalable development programs, and custom solutions designed for specific organizational challenges. The Josh Bersin Company calls leaders who master these capabilities “supermanagers”—those who blend human-centered leadership with AI adoption to drive transformation. That's exactly what we're seeing work in practice.

Seeing the Big Picture

How it supports AI transformation: As AI automates tactical work, leaders must elevate their thinking. They need to understand how AI fits into the broader organizational strategy—where it creates value, where it introduces risk, and how to position their teams for the changes ahead. Strategic thinkers can distinguish between AI hype and genuine opportunity, making smarter investment decisions.

Signs of skill gaps: Leaders who focus more on short-term deliverables and less on long-term needs. They react to AI with hesitation or resistance, rather than thoughtful evaluation. Their teams lack clarity about how their work connects to the big picture and priorities.

Focusing on the Right Work 

How it supports AI transformation: One of the first things I do with coaching clients is helping them understand their “Big 3”—the top three things they can uniquely do that have the greatest impact on the business. We build this framework into all our work—coaching engagements, custom leadership development solutions, and scalable programs like New Lens. This understanding helps leaders determine what they can delegate to AI and what tasks need to remain high-touch.

Signs of skill gaps: Leaders who constantly seem to be “putting out fires.” They believe that if they want something done right, they have to do it themselves. They struggle to articulate what work truly requires their unique skills versus what could be handled by others—or by AI.

Communicating with Influence and Impact

How it supports AI transformation: Change requires communication—and AI transformation involves relentless change. Leaders must articulate the “why” behind AI initiatives in ways that resonate emotionally, not just logically. They need to translate technical possibilities into compelling visions that motivate their teams to adapt and learn.

Signs of skill gaps: Teams that seem confused about priorities or resistant to change. Messages that land differently than intended. Leaders who over-rely on email rather than direct two-way conversations. A lack of trust or psychological safety within the team. When I see these patterns, the root cause is almost never that the leader doesn't care—it's that they haven't been taught how to communicate change in a way that lands

Building Visibility and Credibility

How it supports AI transformation: In a world where AI can generate content, analysis, and even code, leaders need to be known for their judgment, their relationships, and their ability to see connections others miss. Building visibility ensures decision-makers recognize the unique value you and your team bring.

Signs of skill gaps: Leaders whose contributions go unrecognized despite strong results. Teams that get passed over for high-profile projects. Difficulty gaining support for new initiatives. An assumption that “good work speaks for itself” without any intentional effort to share wins.

Navigating Organizational Dynamics

How it supports AI transformation: During AI implementation, there will be territorial concerns, budget battles, and competing priorities. Leaders who can skillfully navigate these dynamics—building coalitions, managing stakeholders, and finding win-win solutions—will drive successful adoption while others get mired in resistance.

Signs of skill gaps: Leaders who are blindsided by organizational decisions. Initiatives that stall despite clear business value. A tendency to avoid conflict or dismiss organizational politics as “games.” Difficulty influencing peers or getting buy-in from other departments.

Building a Powerful Network 

How it supports AI transformation: Nobody navigates transformation alone. Leaders with strong networks have access to diverse perspectives, early information about changes, and support when initiatives hit obstacles. As AI reshapes roles and reporting structures, relationships become even more valuable—they’re the connective tissue that makes organizations function.

Signs of skill gaps: Leaders who only network when they need something. Limited relationships outside their immediate team, department, or function. A network of people who look exactly like they do. Difficulty getting meetings with key stakeholders or being left out of important conversations.

Building Leadership Courage and Resilience 

How it supports AI transformation: Transformation is exhausting—and it’s fueling manager burnout. Leaders need the resilience to sustain their energy through waves of change and the courage to make tough calls, advocate for their teams, and speak up when AI initiatives are heading in the wrong direction.

Signs of skill gaps: Leaders showing signs of burnout—cynicism, disengagement, declining performance. Avoiding difficult decisions or conversations. An inability to bounce back from setbacks. Teams that mirror their leader’s stress and anxiety.

Developing a High-Performing Team

How it supports AI transformation: AI amplifies team capability—but only if the team is already functioning well. Leaders who can build trust, foster psychological safety, and create clarity around roles and expectations will see AI multiply their team’s impact. Those with dysfunctional teams will find that AI only magnifies existing problems.

Signs of a skill gap: High turnover and difficulty retaining top talent. Team members working in silos rather than collaborating. Meetings that feel like status updates rather than true collaboration. A lack of constructive conflict—either too much discord or artificial harmony.

Leading with Emotional Intelligence

How it supports AI transformation: As AI handles more analytical tasks, emotional intelligence becomes the defining human capability. Leaders need to read the room, sense when team members are struggling with change, and respond with empathy while still driving results.

Signs of skill gaps: Leaders who are surprised by team reactions to change. Difficulty managing their own stress in ways that don’t affect the team. Feedback that is either too harsh or avoided entirely.

Reimagine L&D in 2026

The way we think about learning and development is shifting—fast. On Thursday, January 29, I’ll be hosting a live session: “What’s Next for L&D: The Biggest Shifts Shaping 2026.”

I want to share what I'm learning and synthesizing from working with organizations in real-time: what's actually shifting, what's working, and how we're all adapting together. We’ll talk about:

  • The biggest drivers of high performance in the current environment

  • How AI is (really) reshaping learning strategy

  • What all of this means for managers and leaders

  • Scalable coaching models that actually work

I'd love to explore these questions together. Join us if you're trying to figure out what's next.

📅 Thursday, January 29, 2026

🕒 12:00 PM CT

🔗 Reserve your spot here: https://luma.com/qkos4s7j


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.