AI literacy is rapidly becoming a boardroom, regulatory and investor issue as companies move from AI experiments to real-world deployment.
Adobe Stock
AI literacy is about ensuring an organization’s workforce understands AI, how it affects their roles and is capable of using, overseeing and measuring its work.
I’ve always championed it as a critical for every business. Even if they never directly use it, everyone should be comfortable working with it, talking about it and being aware of the risks.
Today, this is no longer just a skills, HR or training issue; it’s a boardroom priority. And the extent to which an organization’s staff is literate about the opportunities and threats AI creates is an important signal for investors, too.
AI is moving from pilots into full-scale operation, and a high-level overview often isn’t enough.
That doesn’t mean everyone has to develop a deep technical understanding of AI. But everyone whose work touches on AI (which is more and more of us every day) needs enough understanding to make informed decisions and spot potential risks.
Today, there’s a growing understanding of this in the boardroom, and some jurisdictions have even passed laws requiring employees to promote AI literacy. So let’s take a look at what this means and what businesses need to do.
Why Now?
There are two forces driving this shift. First, there’s the market. AI capability is becoming recognized as a barometer of future success, and unprepared or unknowledgeable organizations are increasingly seen as risky bets by investors.
Secondly, regulation is tightening, and new rules expect organizations to demonstrate they’re responsible in their attitude towards, and execution of AI. For example, Article 4 of the EU AI Act requires businesses to take measures to “ensure a sufficient level of AI literacy” across workforces.
Taken together, market forces and regulation mean that organizations are now expected to demonstrate a high level of AI literacy. They must show their employees how to protect themselves and the company against deepfake phishing attacks and when human intervention or oversight is critical.
For investors, it’s a clear signal. According to one Mercer study, 97 percent of them are less likely to fund companies that fail to systematically upskill their workforce on AI. And 77 percent are more likely to invest in companies that have an active commitment to AI education.
This is already being operationalized in some companies, with Accenture among those known to have directly linked AI use to employee performance and promotion.
All of this means AI literacy is shifting from a relatively vague and informal capability into something businesses must be able to structure, deliver and measure the success of. Leaders shouldn’t assume it’s something everyone will simply pick up as they go along.
But what does an effective, organization-wide AI literacy strategy look like in practice?
What This Means
The implication for business is that AI literacy should be baked into corporate culture. Everyone needs to know how AI creates opportunities and threats, how to use it effectively, and how to challenge risk and governance decisions.
But beyond that, everyone needs information specific to their role, regarding their unique responsibilities as well as how their jobs are likely to be affected.
Red lines need to be established. What data can or can’t be exposed to AI? Where is human oversight mandatory? What are the lines of reporting or whistleblowing?
And crucially, all this needs to be measurable. We have to be able to answer several simple but important questions:
How knowledgeable is the organization as a whole about what the company is doing with AI?
How aware is it of the risks?
Does it understand how AI affects individual roles, the wider business and the industry as a whole?
When you look at AI literacy like this, it becomes something that can be measured and improved over time.
Ultimately, AI literacy is about preparing organizations to succeed in an AI-driven world.
Businesses that recognize this opportunity now and build solid processes to raise AI literacy will be best placed to use it to drive competitive advantage in the coming years.
