While 80% of human resources decision-makers polled said AI tools are part of everyday tasks, and 83% said AI helps employees work faster, 67% said AI is “creating new points of friction and mistrust,” according to a new report from MetLife, a financial services firm.
“We heard concern about job dislocation,” said Todd Katz, head of U.S. group benefits at MetLife. “We heard concern about the need to adapt, and so that’s creating friction — friction between the employer and the employee.”
MetLife study compiled data from three surveys: two with about 2,500 employees each, conducted in October 2025 and January 2026, and another in October 2025 with about 2,500 benefits decision-makers from large, medium, and small companies.
How employers can alleviate worker concerns
Boonchai Wedmakawand | Moment | Getty Images
As AI reshapes careers by automating routine tasks, experts say it is more important for workers to develop “human” skills like strategic thinking.
Alleviating workers’ concerns has a great deal to do not only with technology itself, but also how companies introduce it and prepare their workforce for it, said Nela Richardson, chief economist for HR and payroll services company ADP.
“It takes business processes. It takes change management. It takes leveling up your workforce, upskilling your talent, so that they are ready for these tools as well,” she said.
Some employees may not be up for the task yet. Another recent survey from BetterUp Labs and Stanford Social Media Lab found that 53% of U.S. workers said they had turned in “workslop” — which the research defines as “AI-generated content that looks good, but lacks substance.”
“It’s low effort, low quality on the part of the person who is creating the AI-generated work, and it shifts the burden from the sender to the receiver,” said Kate Niederhoffer, a social psychologist and chief scientist at BetterUp Labs, a research arm of the digital coaching platform.
About 40% of workers said they’d received “workslop” in the last month, according to the survey, which was conducted in September.
“It’s adding extra burden, extra time, extra toll, extra judgment, and a lower likelihood of working with the people who are creating it. That’s really the problem here,” Niederhoffer said. It makes it harder for colleagues to collaborate, she said, and can also contribute to mistrust.
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