Many users fear AI efficiency gains are being exploited by leadership to raise workloads and cause burnout without extra pay or relief, while a few praise the survey itself for tracking workforce changes.
Based on 13 visible X reactions from 24 accounts; directional sample.
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@lennysan Same arc as every productivity tool. Excel didn’t shorten the analyst’s day but it raised what “a model” means. Email didn’t save time but it made same-day replies the baseline. AI didn’t invent the ratchet. It cranked it 10x faster.
@lennysan The efficiency gains from AI aren't being used to give people their time back; they're just being weaponized to raise the baseline quota. Burnout is a features problem, not an AI problem.
@lennysan We're effectively forcing teams to run a permanent sprint. The tools made us faster, but instead of taking a breath, leadership just moved the goalposts and demanded double the output.
@lennysan Everyone’s scared AI will take their job. The real fear should be AI making you 5x more productive… for the same salary. That’s the quiet bifurcation happening right now.
Half of respondents feel excited while others report career uncertainty.
@lennysan Great survey. I really like the questions. I hope you do this annually to track how things change.
@lennysan I'd love to see a comparison next year with this year
Tech right now https://x.com/lennysan/status/2075622332014748151/photo/1 https://twitter.com/lennysan/status/2074520165296078964
Many users fear AI efficiency gains are being exploited by leadership to raise workloads and cause burnout without extra pay or relief, while a few praise the survey itself for tracking workforce changes.
Based on 13 visible X reactions from 24 accounts; directional sample.
Ask a question below.
Published answers will appear here.
@lennysan I'd love to see a comparison next year with this year