The adoption gap is driving a retention crisis. Advanced AI users—precisely the workers organizations most need to keep—are increasingly leaving for competitors aggressively recruiting specialized talent. McKinsey identifies skill gaps as a major barrier, with 46% of leaders acknowledging they lack the internal expertise to integrate AI effectively. Organizations are responding by hiring AI and machine learning engineers and data scientists while launching upskilling programs, but these efforts have not yet stemmed departures among early-tenure employees, whose quit rates now approach those of long-tenure workers.
For in-house counsel and compliance teams, the implications are immediate. The real problem is not enforcement but usability and trust. Employees bypass official policies because sanctioned tools require more steps than shadow alternatives. Organizations that address this through transparent communication about AI's impact on headcount, honest forums for employee input, and genuinely user-friendly approved tools will retain talent and accelerate maturity. Those that rely on policy enforcement alone will continue losing their most capable workers to competitors. The window to reset this dynamic is narrowing as 2026 approaches.