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46% of Managers Are in AI Denial – And It Could Cost Them Their Jobs
4 hours ago -
3 minutes, 41 seconds
If you're a manager who thinks AI will change everyone's job but yours, you're not alone. But you might be wrong. A recent study by Leadership IQ found that while nearly 80% of managers use AI tools like ChatGPT every week, 46% still believe AI won't impact their own role. This disconnect is dangerous. It's called AI denial, and it could cost managers their jobs.
Why Managers Are in AI Denial
It's easy to see why managers feel safe. They use AI daily to clean up emails, summarize meetings, or polish writing. But that's not deep use. It's dabbling. And when you only use AI for small tasks, you miss the bigger picture: AI can now handle entire parts of a manager's job.
In fact, Section's 2026 AI Proficiency Report shows that 54% of workers rate themselves as AI proficient. But when tested, only 10% actually are. Among managers, just 33% use AI daily, and their average proficiency is barely above their team's.
The Persistence Gap
This denial is stubborn. Leadership IQ first measured these attitudes in 2023. Two years later, despite a huge jump in AI usage, the same percentage of managers (54%) still believe AI will affect their jobs. The numbers didn't budge. Psychologists call this motivated reasoning – a defense mechanism where your brain protects you from a scary truth.
The Real Threat: Middle Management Is in the Floodplain
While managers reassure themselves, the data tells a different story. In the first half of 2026, U.S. employers blamed AI for over 101,743 job cuts – nearly double the total for all of 2025. AI is now the top reason for layoffs in America.
And the cuts are not random. Gartner predicts that by the end of 2026, 1 in 5 organizations will use AI to flatten their hierarchy and eliminate more than half of middle-management roles. MIT Sloan researchers found that at companies using AI at scale, managers now oversee up to 15 people instead of the old norm of 7. Manager headcount has already dropped 6.1% since 2022.
Who's Being Cut?
Executives are not hiding their targets. Cloudflare's CEO said most laid-off workers were “measurers” – middle managers, finance, and legal. Amazon's CEO targeted managers who “want to put their fingerprint on everything.” Companies are posting record profits while shrinking management layers.
Why “I Use AI Every Day” Is the Wrong Comfort
Using AI daily does not mean you are safe. In fact, it might mean the opposite. Roughly 60% of a typical middle manager's week is spent on four tasks:
- Compiling status reports
- Coordinating schedules and workflows
- Doing first-pass reviews of others' work
- Relaying information up and down the chain
AI agents now do these tasks reliably and cheaply. If most of your value is coordination, you have automated your own job. The managers who survive are those doing things AI cannot: coaching people, exercising judgment under ambiguity, and making sense of chaos.
What Smart Managers Are Doing Instead
The good news? The gap is closable. Section's data shows that employees whose managers expect AI use score 1.5 times higher in proficiency and are 2.7 times more likely to be excited about it. Yet only 7.7% of managers tie AI use to performance expectations. That's a huge opportunity.
In one enterprise test, only 13% of employees were proficient with AI agents before training. After structured upskilling, that jumped to 81%. The problem is not that managers can't learn – it's that most haven't started.
Three Steps to Protect Your Job
- Audit your week. What percentage of your time is coordination, status-chasing, and relay? Move that to AI yourself before someone does it for you.
- Get genuinely proficient. Stop dabbling. Learn to build AI workflows and agents, not just prompt a chatbot. Assume you overrate yourself until proven otherwise.
- Make AI use non-optional on your team. Set expectations, model behavior, and tie it to performance reviews. It's the single behavior most linked to thriving teams.
Final Thought
Gallup found that 62% of workers laid off in this wave were people who didn't use AI. Fluency has become a job-protection variable. The comforting story – that AI will change everyone's job but yours – is the most dangerous belief a manager can hold. The people writing the org charts have already stopped believing it. The only question is whether you wake up before your name is on the list.
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