AI adoption is outpacing workforce readiness, warns Professor Serkan Ceylan at Arden University; but the real bottleneck is no longer the tech

For all the breathless headlines about artificial intelligence, the inconvenient truth for leaders is this: enterprise AI is racing ahead, faster than people, processes and governance can follow.
Almost every large UK organisation is investing in AI, yet very few have translated pilots into scaled, value-creating workflows. According to McKinsey, almost all companies reported investing in the technology, but only 1% considered themselves “AI mature” (where AI is fully embedded and delivering material outcomes). The research points bluntly to leadership and organisational readiness - not employee appetite or core technology - as the binding constraint.
The UK’s own AI sector is also booming, but the public evidence is equally clear that skills and adoption capacity lag behind the technological frontier.
Why AI strategies fail without workforce readiness
It’s tempting to view the AI gap as a tooling problem, solvable with more models, more compute and more vendors. But data suggests otherwise:
These findings resonate with OECD’s 2025 brief: training supply, especially for general AI literacy, is falling short of demand across advanced economies. In other words, technology is no longer the main bottleneck; workforce readiness is.
What leading organisations are doing differently
The most effective organisations treat AI reskilling as a change journey, not a learning event. Five patterns stand out here:
Ensuring ROI on reskilling
Ensuring a meaningful return on investment from AI reskilling requires organisations to anchor their learning strategy to economic outcomes and risk posture, rather than simply counting hours of training delivered.
The most effective programmes begin by establishing clear ROI guardrails. This means defining, for every AI-enabled use case, both the minimum level of value it must generate - such as cost savings per case or measurable improvements in quality - and the maximum risk the organisation is willing to tolerate - whether that relates to hallucination rates, data handling errors or other forms of exposure.
Organisations also need to monitor adoption where it actually happens: in the workflow, not the classroom. Instead of relying on completion rates or satisfaction scores, leaders should track how employees are using AI tools in their day-to-day roles by measuring usage patterns, exception handling, approval flows and the quality of outcomes. This operational visibility allows them to link skill uptake directly to tangible business results, such as reduced cycle times, increased revenue contribution or fewer risk incidents.
Finally, ensuring ROI demands a different approach to budgeting is also key. Instead of treating AI-related training as a fixed cost or tying investment to software licences, organisations should allocate resources based on outcomes achieved, reinvesting the savings generated by early wins into the next wave of capability building. This creates a self-sustaining transformation cycle in which learning continuously funds further innovation.
Organisations that frame AI adoption around growth and innovation objectives - supported by investment models that reward realised value - consistently capture more impact than those focused only on efficiency. The UK now has the policy framework to accelerate readiness: the AI foundation skills programme open to every adult, the ‘10 million by 2030’ upskilling target, and a sector-level view of future digital and AI talent needs. The question is execution.
AI won’t replace people; but people and organisations that learn to work with AI, systematically, responsibly and at scale, will outpace those that don’t. Businesses should treat reskilling as its primary AI programme. The technology is ready. Your workforce can be too.
Professor Serkan Ceylan is Dean of Faculty of Business and Innovation, Arden University
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