Gartner Survey Finds All IT Work Will Involve AI by 2030; Organisations Must Navigate AI Readiness and Human Readiness to Find, Capture and Sustain Value

By 2030, CIOs expect that 0% of IT work will be done by humans without AI, 75% will be done by humans augmented with AI, and 25% will be done by AI alone, according to a July 2025 survey of over 700 CIOs by Gartner, Inc., a business and technology insights company. This means that organisations need to focus on a combination of AI readiness and human readiness to ensure the right balance to achieve value from AI.

During the opening keynote of Gartner IT Symposium/Xpo , which is taking place here through Wednesday, Gartner analysts told the audience of over 1100 CIOs and IT executives that few organisations are doing this

“Gartner has been guiding CIOs and IT executives on their AI journeys for many years. In 2023, we showed them how to shape their AI ambition. Last year at IT Symposium/Xpo, we explained how to pace themselves in the AI outcomes race. This year, we’re mapping out the right path for them to take so they can go all-in on AI value,” said Arun Chadrasekaran, Distinguished VP Analyst at Gartner.

“While not all AI is ready to deliver value, humans are even less ready to capture value,” said Galliopi Demetriou, VP Analyst at Gartner. “AI readiness means AI can help you find value and effectively meet the needs of specific use cases. Human readiness is about whether you have the right workforce and organisation to capture and sustain AI value.”

Transform the Workforce to Capture and Sustain AI Value Gartner’s position is that AI’s impact on global jobs will be neutral through 2026. Gartner predicts that by 2027, AI will create more jobs than it destroys.

“AI is not about job loss. It’s about workforce transformation. CIOs should start transforming their workforces by restraining new hiring (especially for roles involving low-complexity tasks) and by repositioning talent to new business areas that generate revenue,” said Chandrasekaran.

Restraining hiring will help to enhance productivity and optimise costs, but to capture new value, more needs to be done. The workforce needs to be able to work with AI in radically new ways. The skills they need are going to change.

“AI will make some skills, such as summarisation, information retrieval and translation, less important, as AI is ready to automate or augment these tasks,” said Demetriou. “But AI also creates a need for entirely new skills. These AI skills are fundamentally different from most skills. Where skills were traditionally about doing tasks better, AI skills are about making you better — a better motivator, a better thinker and a better communicator.”

Gartner analysts said that organisations’ skills development plans should go beyond training people in new skills. If people rely too much on AI and stop using their core skills, skills atrophy can happen. Workers should be tested periodically to make sure they are retaining critical skills for important roles.

Find AI Value Through AI Readiness AI readiness should be evaluated in terms of costs, technical capabilities, and vendors:

Gartner has identified four perspectives to assess how ready organisations are for every initiative they pursue. This system will help guide organisations on the path to AI value by gauging whether technology and human talent are ready to achieve their AI ambitions.

“Following the Gartner Positioning System, organisations can seek to find, capture, and sustain AI value. If they are successful, they can transcend their limitations,” said Chandrasekaran. “AI creates shockwaves which might alter the way we think about hospitals in the future, more as a treatment center than as a diagnosis or recovery center. But the real payoff comes when AI solutions are focused on improving the core competencies of an organisation or solving impossible problems.”