×

注意!页面内容来自https://www.generation.org/news/age-proofing-ai-new-research-from-generation/,本站不储存任何内容,为了更好的阅读体验进行在线解析,若有广告出现,请及时反馈。若您觉得侵犯了您的利益,请通知我们进行删除,然后访问 原网页

Donate

New Research from Generation reveals how Midcareer and Older Workers experience AI at work

New Research from Generation reveals how Midcareer and Older Workers experience AI at work

New data from Generationthe global employment nonprofitunveils trends in how midcareer and older workers are using and experiencing AI in the workplace.

The reportAge-Proofing AI: Enabling an intergenerational workforce to benefit from AIwas created with grant support from Google.org and The SCAN Foundation. Generation commissioned YouGov to conduct a research study across FranceIrelandSpainthe United Kingdomand the United States. The survey included responses from 2,610 employees over age 45 working in entry-level and mid-level roles and 1,488 employers and explored the challenges and opportunities facing midcareer and older workers in navigating the rise of AI in the workplace.

With hiring decliningage bias remains pervasive

Employers in both the U.S. and Europe predict sharp declines in hiring for entry-level and mid-level positionswith reductions expected to range from 22% to 64% over the next 12 months. This tightening in hiring can have an adverse impact on midcareer and older candidates. 

Previous Generation research in 2021 and 2023 showed that employers consistently prefer younger candidates despite the fact that 89% of employers said midcareer and older workers perform as wellif not betterthan their younger peers.

The new survey found this ageism amplified in roles that use AIwith employers indicating a preference for younger candidates. In the U.S.90% of hiring managers are likely to consider candidates under age 35 for AI-related rolescompared to only 32% for those over age 60. In Europe the gap was almost as widewith 33% likely to consider older candidates and 86% likely to consider the younger group.

Midcareer and older employees’ low use of AI understates the opportunity

Of those surveyed15% of workers over age 45 report using generative AI tools at work. The majority of those who do use AI tools are self-taught “power users”using them multiple times a week if not daily to perform a range of activities. They report positive impacts on their work — with more than half reporting improvements in work qualityproductivityand decision-making. A substantial percentage say AI makes their jobs more enjoyablewith 35% of U.S. workers and 58% of European workers citing increased job satisfaction due to AI tools.

Low levels of use may be understating the growth potentialhowever. Older workers may not need AI as heavily to backfill experience gaps. And their experience and judgment may allow them to write better prompts and interpret results more effectively.

Employers are still exploring what support is most effective to reap the benefits of AI

Nearly half of U.S. employers (47%) and 29% of European employers have begun providing AI tools to their workforcewith many more planning to roll them out in the next 12 months. Over 90% now offer some form of training support for workers using AI. That support takes many different formswith only about 50% saying they offer formal trainingand many making self-service or other resources available. 

But employers still have progress to make in identifying what support is most effective and bridging that gap for their employees. 

In our surveyworker interest in AI was mixed. Out of workers over age 45 not currently using AI tools24% in the U.S. and 36% in Europe expressed interest in learning to use them. But another quarter were neutral or unsureand nearly a third of the non-users in the U.S. and 17% in Europe declared they are not interested in AI at all. This ambivalence is consistent with recent research that found it isn’t obvious to experienced workers how AI can fit into their work.

This gap points to a need for employers to marry the experience of midcareer and older workers with skills to unlock the full benefit of AI — by finding use cases that incorporate AI into specific roles and experience levels.

You can read the full report here.


Dr. Mona MourshedFounding Global CEOGenerationsaid:

“While AI has the potential to dramatically alter job tasks and rolesit will be most transformative when its power is merged with human expertise. This data underscores the importance of continuing to combat ageismand also points to an opportunity for us to take a more nuanced view in the AI-infused workplace of how to leverage the unique assets that workers of different ages and experience levels bring to the table.”

 Anika HeavenerVice PresidentInnovation and InvestmentsThe SCAN Foundationsaid:

“This research makes it abundantly clear that AI is already transforming work as we know itbut at the same timeAI implementation has the potential to exacerbate ageism in the workplace. Older workers offer unique skills and experienceand employers need to provide them with the training and support they need to reap the benefits of AI and successfully integrate the technology into their day-to-day jobs.”