More than three years after ChatGPT launched the modern artificial intelligence race, companies are pouring increasing amounts of money into AI tools and integrating them into daily operations. Yet despite widespread adoption and optimism, experts say the technology has not yet produced the dramatic productivity surge or workplace upheaval that many of its strongest supporters predicted, according to a report published Sunday by The Wall Street Journal.
Across the corporate world, businesses are using AI to perform a growing list of functions, including summarizing meetings, writing emails, creating reports, and handling repetitive administrative work. At the same time, spending on AI continues to climb, with surveys of chief executives and technology leaders showing that many organizations intend to expand their investments throughout the year.
Recent research from Deloitte, released in January, along with a separate study from the Wharton School, suggests that major corporations are increasingly embedding AI into essential business operations rather than merely testing its capabilities. In Wharton’s survey of 801 executives, approximately 75 percent said their AI initiatives were generating positive returns.
The technology is now being applied in a wide variety of industries. Retail companies use AI systems to tailor recommendations and modify pricing based on market conditions. Private-equity firms employ AI-driven tools to assist with research and analysis, while manufacturers rely on machine-vision technology to detect flaws and quality issues during production.
One area where AI has made particularly notable progress is software engineering. Modern AI systems can increasingly generate programming code from simple written instructions, significantly reducing the time required to complete certain coding assignments.
“Saying we’re stuck in pilot mode is this outdated idea that’s wrong,” said Ethan Mollick, a professor at the Wharton School who studies AI adoption. “I’m talking to companies all the time getting real value out of AI.”
Even as adoption expands, many organizations continue to struggle with the challenges of implementing AI on a large scale. Investors and corporate boards are demanding proof that expensive AI projects are producing meaningful financial results, while skepticism remains about whether current technology can truly reshape entire industries.
Researchers and analysts often describe AI’s capabilities as a “jagged frontier,” reflecting the reality that the technology can perform exceptionally well in some situations while failing unexpectedly in others.
Independent technology analyst Benedict Evans said AI tends to excel when dealing with highly structured work, including coding, reviewing legal documents, and analyzing financial data. However, it frequently encounters difficulties when tasks require deeper contextual understanding, human judgment, or familiarity with institutional practices.
Another challenge is that AI systems can confidently present inaccurate information, creating risks in environments where precision and reliability are essential.
Because of these shortcomings, some economists argue that predictions of widespread job displacement remain premature.
“Whether you’re a CEO, a manager, a journalist, a professor or a construction worker, I see your skills as beyond what AI can perform,” said Daron Acemoglu, who argues that today’s AI tools are likely to affect only a portion of existing jobs.
Specialists also emphasize that successful implementation involves far more than simply deploying AI software. Organizations need dependable data systems, strong security measures, governance policies, and effective human supervision to ensure the technology operates responsibly and accurately.
Since every company has unique processes and infrastructure, many businesses are forced to create these support systems from scratch, adding significant costs and extending implementation timelines.
Industry experts increasingly believe that internal organizational barriers may be a greater obstacle than the technology itself.
Many businesses operate according to lengthy planning cycles and are reluctant to abandon systems they invested heavily in only a few years ago. Workers may also hesitate to embrace technologies that they believe could eventually eliminate their positions.
“What is being sold is this idea of productivity and efficiency,” said Kate Brennan. “And what that means for the people doing the actual work is rarely part of the conversation.”
Experts note that many companies currently use AI to improve portions of existing procedures rather than fundamentally redesigning how work is performed.
For instance, an insurance company may use AI to accelerate paperwork associated with automobile accident claims while preserving traditional approval processes. A more sweeping transformation would allow AI to evaluate damage through photographs, approve claims automatically, and initiate payments with little human involvement. Achieving that level of change, however, would often require businesses to overhaul longstanding operational models and management structures.
Historians of technology point out that transformative innovations rarely reshape economies overnight.
The widespread economic benefits of electricity took decades to appear in productivity statistics, while the internet required many years before fundamentally altering commerce and business practices.
“The early years looked, from the inside, a lot like AI does now: spectacular promise, uneven results and an industry with every incentive to tell you the revolution was already here,” said James Landay.
Landay argued that institutions typically need substantial time to restructure themselves before they can fully benefit from breakthrough technologies.
“My sense is more like five to 10 years — not the next two or three,” he said.
{Matzav.com}