Jonathan Justus
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Why Only 26% of Workplaces Have Rules for AI-Written Messages

By Jonathan Justus | jonnynow.com | 22 June 2026

A white humanoid robot extends an open hand

Photo by Possessed Photography on Unsplash

Artificial intelligence can now draft your emails, polish your reports and summarise your meetings in seconds. Yet the 2026 State of Internal Communications report from Axios HQ, drawn from more than 1,200 US executives and employees, found a quiet problem hiding inside that convenience: AI has pushed up the volume of workplace messages while pushing down their clarity and understanding. Most striking of all, only 26% of staff say their organisation has clear, enforced rules for how AI should be used in communication. The tools have arrived faster than the judgement to wield them.

Employees are not asking machines to write more for them; they are asking for relief. An April 2026 study of 1,175 full-time workers, commissioned by Korbyt and conducted by Reworked, found that 92% believe AI should reduce information overload, not add to it. The promise of automation was a calmer inbox. The reality, for many, is a louder one filled with text that reads smoothly but says little.

The volume went up, the meaning went down

Speed is seductive. When a chatbot can produce a tidy paragraph on demand, the temptation is to send more, more often, to more people. But communication is not measured in output; it is measured in what lands. A message that is grammatically perfect and strategically empty still fails. The Axios HQ findings suggest that organisations have mistaken fluency for clarity, mistaking the ability to generate words for the ability to be understood. The professional who stands out in 2026 is not the one who produces the most polished prose, but the one who knows what to leave out.

Why audiences can feel the difference

There is a deeper cost than clutter. Research published in the Journal of Business Research by a New York Institute of Technology scholar found that communications people believe were written by AI are perceived as less authentic than those written by a human, especially when the message is emotional. The effect was strong enough to dent loyalty and reduce positive word of mouth. The negative reaction softened when the AI was used only for editing, or when the content was purely factual. The lesson for any professional is precise: machines are useful for tidying and structuring, but the moment a message carries feeling, trust or persuasion, the human voice must lead. Audiences sense a ghostwriter, even a synthetic one.

The discipline machines can't replace

None of this is an argument against AI. It is an argument for the skills that decide whether AI helps or harms. Knowing your reader, choosing the single point that matters, structuring an argument so it persuades, and judging when warmth beats efficiency: these remain stubbornly human. An organisation can buy the most advanced writing assistant on the market and still drown its people in noise, because the technology amplifies whatever discipline, or lack of it, already exists. Communication skill is now the multiplier that determines the return on every tool a team adopts.

Key statistic: Only 26% of employees say their organisation has clear, enforced rules for using AI in workplace communication. (Axios HQ, 2026)

Before reaching for the machine, it is worth relearning how humans actually connect. In her widely shared TED talk, journalist Celeste Headlee distils a lifetime of interviewing into practical habits for genuine conversation, a reminder that the fundamentals of being understood predate every algorithm.

Master Professional Communication with Elevana

AI will keep getting better at producing words. The advantage now belongs to professionals who can direct it with clarity, judgement and an authentic voice. Elevana's PRO Communicator programme is built for exactly this moment, training you to think before you send, to write with intent, and to make every message earn its place. Explore the Programme →

The machine can write the words. Only you can make them mean something.

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