New Randstad Digital report reveals a widening disconnect between AI investment and workforce readiness
PR Newswire
DIEMEN, Netherlands, May 12, 2026
DIEMEN, Netherlands, May 12, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Enterprises are deploying AI across their tech stacks at unprecedented speed. Development cycles are accelerating and code is being generated faster than ever. Yet, most organizations aren’t seeing the business outcomes they expected.
A new global report from Randstad Digital, The AI Capability Gap: Why Technology Investment Fails Without Talent Infrastructure, reveals that the most limiting factor in AI-led transformation is not the technology—it’s the human element. This imbalance has created what Randstad Digital calls the “Productivity Paradox”: a critical gap where companies invest in platforms faster than they build the workforce capability to use them.
The capability crisis: Acceleration without direction.
- While 63% of enterprises have invested in AI training over the past year, the investment is failing to hit the mark. The report highlights a stark disconnect between corporate effort and worker readiness:
- 74% of technology professionals say they must upgrade their skills to remain relevant.
- 52% of tech professionals are seeking training independently because internal programs cannot keep pace with the rate of technological change.
- 27% of tech talent state their organizations are still not doing enough to develop their skills.
“Enterprise AI isn’t failing at the model level; it’s failing at the implementation layer,” said Michael Morris, global head of platform and talent at Randstad Digital. “If you increase the velocity of your tools without increasing the capacity of your engineers to govern and optimize them, you get technical debt at scale.”
The talent exodus: The cost of stagnation.
The consequences of this gap are no longer abstract; they are impacting the bottom line through a talent exodus. Nearly 1 in 4 technology professionals globally have quit jobs specifically because employers failed to provide structured upskilling opportunities.
The trend is most noticeable in high-growth and established tech hubs:
- North-Western Europe: 30% have left roles over lack of development opportunities
- Eastern Europe: 27%
- Asia Pacific: 26%
- North America: 24%
The need for technology professionals to seek upskilling opportunities has never been greater. Around 52% of technology professionals are seeking training independently because employer-provided learning can’t keep up with the rate of technological change. Engineers, architects, and delivery leads are actively choosing employers who treat learning as continuous infrastructure.
A new model is evolving.
As workforce demands continue to evolve, the importance of modern learning solutions is accelerating. Digital training solutions, such as custom digital academies, boost workforce readiness by 56% and enhance operational efficiency. Organizations that invest in targeted upskilling initiatives gain a critical edge in worker performance and productivity.
The research indicates that traditional learning models, revolving around annual budgets and one-off workshops, are obsolete in an era where AI capabilities evolve weekly. To bridge the gap, leading organizations must pivot toward “Continuous Capability Infrastructure.” This approach treats learning as a mission-critical component of the tech stack—embedded into workflows, personalized to specific roles, and measured by delivery outcomes rather than course completion.
“The question for leaders is no longer ‘How much are we spending on AI?’ but ‘How fast are our engineering teams learning to work with it?,” Morris adds. “Upskilling can no longer be treated as an HR program or professional development perk. It’s business-critical infrastructure, part of your technology stack, not separate from it. It needs to be funded, architected, measured, and continuously improved like any other mission-critical system. The organizations that view workforce capability as a layer of their technology stack are the ones that will finally see the AI ROI that has remained so elusive.”
About the report:
The AI Capability Gap: Why Technology Investment Fails Without Talent Infrastructure draws from our latest Workmonitor research. Workmonitor is based on insights from over 27,000 individuals and 1,225 employers across 35 markets, along with secondary insights from over 3 million global job postings.
download the report
About Randstad Digital:
Randstad Digital is the digital talent and technology workforce solutions arm of Randstad, the world’s leading talent company. We partner with enterprises globally to build, scale, and continuously upskill technology teams—treating workforce capability as strategic infrastructure, not operational overhead. For more information, visit www.randstaddigital.com.
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SOURCE Randstad Digital


