Skip to content

JOBUZO

  • News
  • Indonesia
  • Toggle search form
The first signs of burnout are coming from the people who embrace AI the most

The first signs of burnout are coming from the people who embrace AI the most

Posted on 10 February 2026 By jobuzo

The most seductive narrative in American work culture right now isn’t that AI will take your job. It’s that AI will save you from it.

That’s the version the industry has spent the last three years selling to millions of nervous people who are eager to buy it. Yes, some white-collar jobs will disappear. But for most other roles, the argument goes, AI is a force multiplier. You become a more capable, more indispensable lawyer, consultant, writer, coder, financial analyst — and so on. The tools work for you, you work less hard, everybody wins.

But a new study published in Harvard Business Review follows that premise to its actual conclusion, and what it finds there isn’t a productivity revolution. It finds companies are at risk of becoming burnout machines.

As part of what they describe as “in-progress research,” UC Berkeley researchers spent eight months inside a 200-person tech company watching what happened when workers genuinely embraced AI. What they found across more than 40 “in-depth” interviews was that nobody was pressured at this company. Nobody was told to hit new targets. People just started doing more because the tools made more feel doable. But because they could do these things, work began bleeding into lunch breaks and late evenings. The employees’ to-do lists expanded to fill every hour that AI freed up, and then kept going.

As one engineer told them, “You had thought that maybe, oh, because you could be more productive with AI, then you save some time, you can work less. But then really, you don’t work less. You just work the same amount or even more.”

Over on the tech industry forum Hacker News, one commenter had the same reaction, writing, “I feel this. Since my team has jumped into an AI everything working style, expectations have tripled, stress has tripled and actual productivity has only gone up by maybe 10%. It feels like leadership is putting immense pressure on everyone to prove their investment in AI is worth it and we all feel the pressure to try to show them it is while actually having to work longer hours to do so.”

News :<div>12 weeks' jail for school IT support technician who took upskirt videos of teachers</div>

It’s fascinating and also alarming. The argument about AI and work has always stalled on the same question — are the gains real? But too few have stopped to ask what happens when they are.

Techcrunch event

Boston, MA
|
June 23, 2026

The researchers’ new findings aren’t entirely novel. A separate trial last summer found experienced developers using AI tools took 19% longer on tasks while believing they were 20% faster. Around the same time, a National Bureau of Economic Research study tracking AI adoption across thousands of workplaces found that productivity gains amounted to just 3% in time savings, with no significant impact on earnings or hours worked in any occupation. Both studies have gotten picked apart.

This one may be harder to dismiss because it doesn’t challenge the premise that AI can augment what employees can do on their own. It confirms it, then shows where all that augmentation actually leads, which is “fatigue, burnout, and a growing sense that work is harder to step away from, especially as organizational expectations for speed and responsiveness rise,” according to the researchers.

The industry bet that helping people do more would be the answer to everything, but it may turn out to be the beginning of a different problem entirely. The research is worth reading, here.

News :Migrant acquitted in first trial over US border military zones

The first signs of burnout are coming from the people who embrace AI the most


News

Post navigation

Previous Post: Egypt urges deployment of intl force to monitor Gaza ceasefire
Next Post: YouTube rolls out an AI playlist generator for Premium users

Related Posts

Rwanda marks National Heroes' Day Rwanda marks National Heroes’ Day News
Kimi developer Moonshot shows China’s growing AI depth: US government report Kimi developer Moonshot shows China’s growing AI depth: US government report News
The BRABUS XLP 800 6×6 ADVENTURE Is a Monster You Have to See The BRABUS XLP 800 6×6 ADVENTURE Is a Monster You Have to See News

Latest

  • Let This Be Your Easy Guide to What the Easy A Cast Is Up to Now
  • Ultrahuman’s former hardware VP raises $5.5M for devices that control AI agents, not just record you
  • Meta now alerts parents if their teen discussed suicide or self-harm with its AI chatbot
  • Tensions spur ultra-rich to diversify across Asia
  • China memory-chip maker CXMT set for mega IPO
  • Merz says U.S. should not interfere in German elections
  • Trump resumes Iran’s naval blockade, threatens strikes on power plants
  • Kenya’s car market evolves despite high import taxes
  • Credit card outage disrupts payments at stores across Japan
  • The AI Backlash Has Tech Executives Fearing for Their Lives

Copyright © 2025 JOBUZO. Disclaimers | Privacy Policies

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs