Microsoft’s 2026 Work Trend Index captures a pattern showing up across enterprise AI deployments: The productivity conversation is outpacing the organizational-design conversation. On the productivity side, employees are using AI to create new capacity, agents are moving into enterprise workflows, and the users getting the most value are treating AI as a thinking partner while keeping human judgment at the center. But productivity gains alone are becoming a distraction from the harder work of organizational redesign. Without that redesign, enterprises risk merely implementing marginal improvements to efficiency inside outdated workflows — instead of transforming them.
Microsoft’s 2026 research is based on trillions of anonymized Microsoft 365 productivity signals, along with a survey of 20,000 AI-using workers across 10 countries and expert interviews on AI, work and organizational psychology.
Microsoft frames the 2026 WTI report around a simple idea: As AI and agents take on more execution, humans have more agency to direct the work that’s done, make decisions and own the outcomes. That is the right enterprise lens, because AI maturity increasingly depends on whether organizations can redesign work around human and agent collaboration.
(Note: Microsoft is an advisory client of my firm, Moor Insights & Strategy.)
Enterprise AI Adoption Signals Are Strong
The scale of activity is hard to dismiss. For starters, active agents in the Microsoft 365 ecosystem grew 15x year over year and 18x in large enterprises. Microsoft found that 58% of AI users say they are producing work they could not have produced a year ago, and that figure rises to 80% among what Microsoft calls “Frontier Professionals,” the most advanced AI users in the research. The company also reports that 66% of AI users say AI has allowed them to spend more time on high-value work.
Another important signal is how users are applying the technology. In a privacy-preserving analysis of more than 100,000 Microsoft 365 Copilot chats, Microsoft found that 49% of conversations supported cognitive work such as analyzing information, solving problems, evaluating and thinking creatively. (The rest were more focused on transactional uses, including working with others, routine drafting, summarizing and information-gathering.) Taken together, this near‑even split suggests that AI is starting to influence how knowledge work is reasoned through, reviewed and improved, not just how quickly individual tasks get done.
AI Reskilling Is Moving From Prompting To Judgment
AI, of course, can only go so far, and one line from the report captures the leadership challenge well: “Frontier Professionals refuse to outsource their thinking.” Microsoft’s research suggests that this mindset is aspirational, not unique to that group. Across the broader population of AI users, 86% say they treat AI output as a starting point and say they remain responsible for the thinking. As AI takes on more types of work, users identify the top human skills as quality control of AI output at 50% and critical thinking at 46%.
In my view, these findings should change the reskilling agenda. Many organizations started with AI literacy, prompt training and broad experimentation. But the next phase requires training in exercising judgment, review processes, exception handling, process design, agent governance and the ability to determine when an AI should do the work and when a human should.
Other WTI findings reinforce the point. Frontier Professionals are more likely than others to intentionally do some work without AI to keep their skills sharp, at 43% versus 30%, and they are more likely to pause before starting work to decide which parts should be done by AI, at 53% versus 33%. That is a stronger maturity signal than usage frequency alone.
AI Highlights An Operational Problem, Not A Technology Problem
Many enterprise AI programs underemphasize the organizational conditions around the tools themselves. Microsoft found that organizational factors such as culture, manager support and talent practices account for more than 2x the reported AI impact of individual factors including mindset and behavior, with organizational factors at 67% and individual factors at 32%. At the same time, only 26% of surveyed AI users say their leadership is clearly and consistently aligned on AI.
This creates what Microsoft calls the Transformation Paradox, which arises from the disconnect between employees’ urgency to adapt with AI and the organizational incentives that still favor sticking with existing goals and ways of working. The WTI report found that 65% of AI users fear falling behind if they do not use AI to adapt quickly, while 45% say it feels safer to focus on current goals than to redesign work with AI, and only 13% say they are rewarded for reinventing work with AI when short‑term results fall short. In other words, most employees feel pressure to adapt, but very few see their organizations recognizing the learning and redesign work that routinely happens before AI projects show measurable results. The pattern points to a management dilemma, not a gap in what the underlying tools can do.
Accenture’s Pulse of Change research adds useful context. Accenture found that 86% of C-suite leaders plan to increase AI investment in 2026. At the same time, only 32% say they have achieved sustained, enterprise-wide AI impact, and just 27% of employees strongly agree they are comfortable delegating tasks to AI agents. This points to the change-management problems that hamper many AI programs.
From ‘Digital Debt’ To Agentic Work
I have been closely following the year-over-year arc of the WTI, and it reflects how quickly the conversation around enterprise AI has shifted. In 2023, the research framed the issue as “digital debt,” with 64% of respondents saying they struggled to find the time and energy to do their jobs and 68% saying they lacked enough uninterrupted focus time during the workday. In 2024, AI had moved quickly into the workplace, with 75% of knowledge workers using AI at work and 78% of AI users bringing their own AI tools to work. By 2025, Microsoft was talking about the “Frontier Firm,” an organization structured around on-demand intelligence and human-agent teams. That report found that 81% of leaders expected agents to be moderately or extensively integrated into their company’s AI strategy within 12 to 18 months.
The 2026 report advances the narrative from AI as a capacity to AI as a learning system. Microsoft maps AI users across individual AI capability and organizational readiness, and finds that only 19% are in the Frontier zone, while about half are in what Microsoft calls the emergent zone. That helps explain why AI progress feels uneven inside many large companies. Some employees are already significantly redesigning their work, while others are only beginning to experiment at the edges of their roles and many are still working largely as they did before, all while the operating model around them is still catching up.
The Market Is Proving That Productivity-First AI Strategies Are Plateauing
Independent research confirms the pattern of broad adoption and visible productivity gains yet relatively limited transformation. Gallup research from early this year found that 50% of employed American adults use AI in their roles at least a few times a year, and 65% of employees in organizations that implement AI say it has improved their productivity and efficiency. The same study also found that a much smaller percentage – only about one in 10 employees – in AI-adopting organizations strongly agree that AI has transformed how work gets done in their organization.
While it should be obvious that AI can improve productivity before it transforms workflows — let alone the nature of an individual’s or company’s work— not everyone observes these distinctions. This may be why only about a tenth of workers agree that AI is transformative for their organizations while, as cited earlier, three times that amount of C-level executives believe they have achieved sustained, enterprise-wide impact from AI. It stands to reason that at least some of these leaders are confusing individual efficiency gains with enterprise reinvention.
McKinsey’s 2025 State of AI research shows a similar disconnect between frequency of AI use and genuine enterprise-wide results arising from it. McKinsey found that 88% of respondents report regular AI use in at least one business function. But less than half that many — only 39% — attribute any EBIT impact to AI. Meanwhile, at a time when agentic processes are all the rage, just 23% say their organizations are scaling an agentic AI system somewhere in the enterprise.
A recent BCG study adds a harder edge to the widening value gap. It found that 60% of companies globally were not generating material value from AI despite substantial investment (which dovetails neatly with McKinsey’s finding of 39% of organizations reaping EBIT impact). According to BCG, more than 85% of employees remain in the task-assistance and -delegation stages of AI adoption, while less than 10% have reached semiautonomous collaboration or autonomous orchestration. That figure is significantly narrower than Microsoft’s 19% Frontier estimate, which includes a broader set of advanced users whose skills and organizational context reinforce each other.
AI-Driven Job Displacement Will Likely Accelerate If Operating Models Do Not Change
Job loss deserves a direct mention because it is already part of the enterprise AI conversation. The World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report 2025 projects 170 million jobs created and 92 million jobs displaced by 2030, for net growth of 78 million jobs. It also shows that 40% of employers anticipate reducing their workforce in areas where AI can automate tasks.
AI is already affecting jobs. The question is whether that shift becomes a blunt cost-reduction exercise or a redesign of work, skills, roles and organizational capacity. Companies that optimize tasks without redesigning operating models will likely focus on cutting headcount. Companies that redesign work may selectively reduce headcount in certain areas, but they are also far more likely to redeploy talent and build new capabilities.
Some organizations are already realigning talent strategy around AI. LinkedIn projects that 70% of the skills used in most jobs will change by 2030, with AI as a catalyst. Meanwhile, the PwC 2025 Global AI Jobs Barometer finds that workers with AI skills command an average wage premium of 56%. This indicates that the market is already pricing in AI capability and that workers without these skills may face a growing disadvantage.
Productivity Is The Wrong Scoreboard For Enterprise AI
As adoption grows and a minority of organizations begin to reshape how work gets done, the next challenge is how to measure the real impacts of that change. How leaders frame AI’s purpose will shape the balance they strike between cost reduction and capability building. Given the substantial investments required for AI talent, tooling and data, most enterprises will need to pursue both.
Competitive differentiation will likely arise from how deliberately leaders optimize for near‑term efficiency versus longer‑term capability. Productivity still matters. It always will. But taken by itself it is too narrow a measure for what AI enables, and it is becoming a trap for enterprises that mistake short-term marginal gains in output volume for durable strategic advantage. Many leaders see widespread AI use — even for simpler tasks — and assume that transformation is underway, when in reality most employees are applying AI at the edges of existing workflows. A minority of organizations are using AI to truly reshape how work gets done; for the rest, adoption is broad, but deep transformation is still relatively rare.
It’s worth it to get a little more specific. When AI can draft, summarize, analyze, route, recommend and act, the question is not just how many tasks it can complete, but whether it is changing the quality and speed of the underlying work. AI-assisted drafting and summarizing can increase output volume, but using AI to analyze, route, recommend and act begins to influence how decisions are made, how workflows cascade across teams and where human judgment is applied. Improving the quality of those functions is where durable advantage starts to show up.
With this in mind, companies need to ask: Are decisions improving? Are cycle times shrinking in the parts of the business that matter most? Are employees spending more time on higher‑value work, and are they more satisfied with the work they are doing? Are teams learning faster? Are agents being appropriately governed, evaluated, and improved over time?
What Enterprise Leaders Should Do About AI Now
For enterprise leaders, the priorities are becoming clear. Start with the workflows where AI can improve decision quality, customer outcomes or cycle time, then redesign those workflows around human and agent collaboration. Invest in reskilling managers, because Microsoft’s research shows that manager modeling, quality standards and space for experimentation correlate with higher AI value, critical thinking and trust in agentic AI. Build the change architecture around AI, including process redesign, governance, training, incentives and measurement.
Companies should also build metrics that reflect the smartest new ways of working with AI: decision quality, learning velocity, employee experience, agent reliability, governance maturity and risk reduction. Just as important, they need to protect human judgment and avoid confusing AI delegation with AI maturity.
The next phase of AI adoption will be defined by the companies that redesign work, reskill people and build measurement systems that reflect how value is actually created in an AI-enabled organization. The companies that win will not be the ones achieving the fastest productivity gains. They will be the ones that got beyond simply measuring productivity and started measuring transformation.
Moor Insights & Strategy provides or has provided paid services to technology companies, like all tech industry research and analyst firms. These services include research, analysis, advising, consulting, benchmarking, acquisition matchmaking and video and speaking sponsorships. Of the companies mentioned in this article, Moor Insights & Strategy currently has (or has had) a paid business relationship with Accenture and Microsoft.


