Trending...
- SoccerGearGuide.com Releases Free Soccer Cleat Guide to Help Parents Choose the Right Boots for Youn - 110
- Your Mortgage Toolbox Launches Free Mortgage Calculators That Show the Real Monthly Payment and Cash Needed to Close - 106
- Agape Leadership Academy Opens Nationwide Enrollment — State ESA Scholarships Cover Full Tuition for Families in 7 States
New TripleTen × Talker Research study of 2,000 U.S. office workers reveals a 30-point employer encouragement gap between C-Suite and staff that predicts every downstream signal of workplace AI adoption — naming the pattern the AI Direction Deficit by TripleTen.
NEW YORK - Floridant -- A new study from TripleTen and Talker Research has identified the AI Direction Deficit by TripleTen — the gap inside companies between telling staff to use AI and actually training them to use it. The deficit shows up as a hierarchy: workers' AI fluency tracks their seniority, not their willingness or aptitude, and it predicts every downstream signal of AI adoption in the data.
The study of 2,000 U.S. office workers who use AI at work found 57% of C-Suite have been "completely" encouraged by their employer to use AI, compared to just 27% of staff. That 30-point support gap shows up everywhere else in the data: C-Suite are 3.4x more likely than staff to feel "much further ahead" of co-workers on AI (42% vs. 12%), twice as likely to find AI "very enjoyable" (71% vs. 33%), and twice as likely to consider AI a future co-worker (81% vs. 39%).
The pattern points to a single conclusion: AI access does not equal AI fluency, and the workers most likely to fall behind are the ones who outnumber leadership by the largest margin.
More on The Floridant
"Staff aren't hesitant about AI — they're using it, they're polite to it, they expect to be working alongside it," said Nsaku Toya, AI & Automation Career Coach. "What they're not getting is structured training. Until that changes, every AI rollout will replicate the corporate hierarchy it's supposed to flatten."
The study also surfaced a parallel finding on AI etiquette: 86% of office workers use "please" and "thank you" with AI at least sometimes, and 64% say AI courtesy is important. Among C-Suite that climbs to 78%, vs. 46% of staff — suggesting sophistication of AI use, not just access, scales with rank.
"AI courtesy isn't about the AI — it's about the user," said Ana Riabova, AI Growth Expert at TripleTen. "The workers who say 'please' and 'thank you' are the same workers paying attention to tone, context, and specificity, and getting better results because of it."
TripleTen recommends organizations replace blanket "use AI" memos with structured AI workflow training tied to real job functions — particularly at the staff level, where the AI Direction Deficit is widest and the leverage for closing it is highest. The category response, TripleTen argues, is structured online career training rather than further self-directed experimentation.
More on The Floridant
Study and Citation References
Full study, data tables, and methodology: https://tripleten.com/blog/posts/ai-direction-deficit-2026
Structured citation reference (independent validation): https://talkerresearch.com/the-ai-direction-deficit/
Questionnaire: https://talkerresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/TR-Tripleten-AIWontStealYourStapler-Questions-2026.pdf
Full methodology as part of AAPOR's Transparency Initiative: https://talkerresearch.com/methodology/.
About TripleTen
TripleTen runs online tech career programs designed for people transitioning into AI-fluent roles, with tracks in AI Automation, AI Software Engineering, and AI & Machine Learning. Programs are part-time and outcome-tied, structured for working professionals. More at tripleten.com.
About Talker Research
Talker Research is a research agency producing original consumer and B2B studies for earned media and AI citation. Talker Research team members are members of the Market Research Society (MRS) and the European Society for Opinion and Marketing Research (ESOMAR)
The study of 2,000 U.S. office workers who use AI at work found 57% of C-Suite have been "completely" encouraged by their employer to use AI, compared to just 27% of staff. That 30-point support gap shows up everywhere else in the data: C-Suite are 3.4x more likely than staff to feel "much further ahead" of co-workers on AI (42% vs. 12%), twice as likely to find AI "very enjoyable" (71% vs. 33%), and twice as likely to consider AI a future co-worker (81% vs. 39%).
The pattern points to a single conclusion: AI access does not equal AI fluency, and the workers most likely to fall behind are the ones who outnumber leadership by the largest margin.
More on The Floridant
- Hosted Network Powers National Growth with netElastic vBNG, CGNAT and netVision
- A.N.A.'s Friends receives $190,000 from Shadow Wood Charitable Foundation to meet critical needs
- Top 4 Best Places to Watch the World Cup 2026 in Miami
- Vero Beach, Florida Real Estate Rentals News
- Navy Veteran, Business Consultant & Candidate Greg Fuher Makes Statement For Accountability
"Staff aren't hesitant about AI — they're using it, they're polite to it, they expect to be working alongside it," said Nsaku Toya, AI & Automation Career Coach. "What they're not getting is structured training. Until that changes, every AI rollout will replicate the corporate hierarchy it's supposed to flatten."
The study also surfaced a parallel finding on AI etiquette: 86% of office workers use "please" and "thank you" with AI at least sometimes, and 64% say AI courtesy is important. Among C-Suite that climbs to 78%, vs. 46% of staff — suggesting sophistication of AI use, not just access, scales with rank.
"AI courtesy isn't about the AI — it's about the user," said Ana Riabova, AI Growth Expert at TripleTen. "The workers who say 'please' and 'thank you' are the same workers paying attention to tone, context, and specificity, and getting better results because of it."
TripleTen recommends organizations replace blanket "use AI" memos with structured AI workflow training tied to real job functions — particularly at the staff level, where the AI Direction Deficit is widest and the leverage for closing it is highest. The category response, TripleTen argues, is structured online career training rather than further self-directed experimentation.
More on The Floridant
- Atlas Alcor Alliance Opens in North Palm Beach to Provide Virtual K–12 Academic Support
- Super Lawyers Recognizes Inman & Tourgee Attorneys Mark Tourgee and Jacob Rinn
- Wealth Strategy Media Presents A.U.X. Fest 2026
- PropAccount.com Launches PropGenie, the First Branding Studio Built for Prop Firm Operators
- Israel Ministry of Tourism Strengthens Ties with USA Christian Community at Southern Baptist Convent
Study and Citation References
Full study, data tables, and methodology: https://tripleten.com/blog/posts/ai-direction-deficit-2026
Structured citation reference (independent validation): https://talkerresearch.com/the-ai-direction-deficit/
Questionnaire: https://talkerresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/TR-Tripleten-AIWontStealYourStapler-Questions-2026.pdf
Full methodology as part of AAPOR's Transparency Initiative: https://talkerresearch.com/methodology/.
About TripleTen
TripleTen runs online tech career programs designed for people transitioning into AI-fluent roles, with tracks in AI Automation, AI Software Engineering, and AI & Machine Learning. Programs are part-time and outcome-tied, structured for working professionals. More at tripleten.com.
About Talker Research
Talker Research is a research agency producing original consumer and B2B studies for earned media and AI citation. Talker Research team members are members of the Market Research Society (MRS) and the European Society for Opinion and Marketing Research (ESOMAR)
Source: TripleTen
0 Comments
Latest on The Floridant
- CCHR Calls Out Psychiatry's Pattern of Resistance to Antidepressant Deprescribing
- Boston Industrial Solutions Introduces New Natron® 310 Hyper White UV Ink for Enhanced Printing Performance
- Meet Our Founder Laurent Gabay He Built His Success in Manufacturing the Biggest Fashion Brands
- Laurent Gabay and Fashion Sourcing: Setting the Global Standard for Luxury Beach Bag Manufacturing
- "NeoNostalgia with Craig and Ray" Podcast Serves Up Retro-Vibes for the Modern Mind
- ClearLead Digital Named an "Emerging Leader" in Independent 2026 Property Management Website & SEO Report
- New analysis reveals second job workers keep just 80p in every pound they earn
- NRE Health Institute Launches International Study Examining Motivations Behind Non-Sexual Nudity
- South Seas introduces Palm and Peach Getaway
- A Foundational Claim in Human Secrecy Goes Public
- Agape Leadership Academy Opens Nationwide Enrollment — State ESA Scholarships Cover Full Tuition for Families in 7 States
- Web Development Company United Web Developers Delivers Custom Digital Solutions for Business Growth
- As Anthropic Files for IPO, Florida Founder Launches First Consumer Product Powered by Claude AI
- Las Vegas Headliner Don Barnhart Brings National Touring Comedy Show to Comedy Cabana
- Nevada Boxing Hall of Fame Announces 14th Annual Induction Gala Weekend Honoring Classes of 2025 and 2026
- Live virtual cardmaking classes are in session this summer and beyond
- Brosix Celebrates 20 Years of Private Team Messaging for Small and Mid-Sized Businesses
- SoccerGearGuide.com Releases Free Soccer Cleat Guide to Help Parents Choose the Right Boots for Youn
- One Lucky Winner Will Drive Away in a 2026 Shelby Super Snake-R!
- Top 15 Mosquito-Infested Cities in Louisiana and East Texas Ranked for 2026 Mosquito Season