By Divya Chowdhury and Maria Martinez
DAVOS, Jan 22 (Reuters) – Companies will not get productivity gains from artificial intelligence unless they invest in real people and redesign how work is done, Julie Teigland, EY’s global vice chair, told Reuters on Thursday.
“There is no ROI if you’re not willing to change the job descriptions,” Teigland said on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum, adding that companies need to adapt processes to capture AI’s benefits.
Teigland cited EY work indicating that intensive training can be linked to productivity improvements, saying that around 81 hours of training per employee could translate into roughly 14% weekly productivity gains, if paired with role redesign.
She said AI’s labour impact will be “multi-generational,” changing entry-level positions and routine white-collar tasks, with employees needing to shift from “doing the task to supervising the task,” becoming “above the loop.”
FROM HYPE TO SCALE
Business leaders in Davos are striking a more practical tone on AI than a year ago, Teigland said.
“I felt the conversations were definitely more real as AI moved from hype to scale,” Teigland said.
Companies are learning AI is not plug-and-play, and ROI requires organisational redesign and training, not just deploying tools.
She said companies have broadly moved past an initial phase of deploying Copilot and familiarising staff with new tools, and are now grappling with how to move on from pilots and proofs of concept.
Getting stuck running too many pilots can become a “death trap,” Teigland said.
(Join GMF on LSEG Messenger for live interviews: https://lseg.group/3KFHrhe)
(Reporting by Divya Chowdhury and Maria Martinez; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

