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Accenture Mandates AI Use for Promotions

Information Age

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Date Published
23 Feb 2026
Priority Score
2
Australian
Yes
Created
23 Feb 2026, 01:30 pm

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Employees monitored for regular adoption of tools.

Summary

Accenture is integrating AI utilization as a critical factor in evaluating employee promotions. Employees are being monitored on their engagement with AI tools like the AI Refinery, which is developed with Nvidia to convert AI technology into business solutions. This initiative aligns with Accenture's strategic pivot towards becoming an AI-focused operation, pushing employees toward AI integration in their roles. Karin Verspoor from RMIT critiqued that merely using AI is insufficient for enhancing job performance; instead, its effective impact should be measured. This approach by Accenture highlights evolving industry standards around AI proficiency but doesn't directly address broader catastrophic AI risks or safety policies.

Body

Accenture: Use AI if you want a promotion Employees monitored for regular adoption of tools. By Leonard Bernardone on Feb 23 2026 11:00 PM Print article Accenture will base future promotions on an employee's use of AI. Photo: Shutterstock Accenture employees may now need to prove they use artificial intelligence to move up the ranks. The consulting giant has reportedly begun measuring staff engagement with internal AI tools as part of promotion decisions. An internal email seen by the Financial Times told associate directors and senior managers they must demonstrate “regular adoption” of AI to secure leadership roles. In the lead-up to its next round of top-level promotions, some senior employees’ weekly log-ins to two in-house AI platforms are being tracked, with the company saying use of its tools would be a “visible input” in talent discussions. One of the monitored tools will reportedly be Accenture’s AI Refinery – a tool built in collaboration with chipmaker Nvidia to help companies scale their use of generative AI and convert “raw AI technology” into “useful business solutions”. Workers seeking a promotion will also need to increase their use of SynOps, the “human-machine operating engine” the company launched in 2019 to automate repetitive tasks, drive growth and “scale operations quickly”. Accenture employs approximately 780,000 staff across its global operations and has previously claimed to have more than 550,000 workers trained in generative AI. Revenue climbs as staff cut Despite Wall Street forecasting $26.19 billion (US$18.52 billion) revenue for Accenture's first quarter in December, the company beat expectations by drawing in some $26.50 billion (US$18.74 billion). Following the surprise revenue growth, chief executive Julie Sweet said the company had strengthened its “leadership in advanced AI”, while the company announced new partnerships with chatbot makers OpenAI and Anthropic. While Accenture has arguably been best known for consulting, cloud services and business process outsourcing in the 2010s, the company has aggressively pushed AI and machine learning solutions in recent years, particularly for the purpose of optimising workplace operations. “Our strategy is to be the reinvention partner of choice for our clients and to be the most client-focused, AI-enabled, great place to work in the world,” Accenture wrote in its first quarter results. After slashing some 11,000 in just three months, the consulting giant last year told its workforce to pick up AI or prepare to lose their job. Accenture has also pushed for its employees to be rebranded as ‘reinventors’ – a label decided after the company announced in June it would reorganise its strategy, consulting, creative, technology and operations arms into a single, AI-focused ‘reinvention services’ unit. Results could be patchy Karin Verspoor, dean of the School of Computing Technologies at RMIT, said AI use in itself should not be viewed as “evidence that the tools are being used effectively, or having a material impact on people’s job performance”. “There are many examples of AI leading people down a rabbit hole, or creating more work when they attempt to co-create something with AI and find it isn’t quite giving them what they want,” said Verspoor. She added that while Accenture was likely trying to “drive innovation within the organisation”, it would be far more beneficial to “measure the impact, rather than simple use” of the technology. “While it seems that the organisation is trying to encourage adoption of technology, that adoption should be purposeful,” she said. “Use of AI just for its own sake doesn’t add value.” Leonard Bernardone Leonard Bernardone is an award-winning techie and writer based in Melbourne. After six years working across multiple startup businesses, Leonard now works as a freelance journalist. His work strives to spread awareness, cyber safety, and technical innovation. Tags: accenture ai employees promotion