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CommentaryConsulting

EY: we found your biggest AI blind spot. It’s called the ‘tempo gap’

By
Patricia Camden
Patricia Camden
and
John Dubois
John Dubois
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By
Patricia Camden
Patricia Camden
and
John Dubois
John Dubois
Down Arrow Button Icon
June 20, 2026, 8:00 AM ET

Patricia Camden is EY Studio+ Customer Experience and Loyalty Leader, and John Dubois is EY Americas AI Strategy Leader.

Patricia Camden is EY Studio+ Customer Experience and Loyalty Leader
Patricia Camden is EY Studio+ Customer Experience and Loyalty Leader.courtesy of EY
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Most organizations think their biggest AI problem is adoption. It isn’t. It’s tempo.

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There is enormous pressure on companies to move faster with AI. Customer interactions are expected to feel immediate. Internal decisions are speeding up, and work that once stretched across days can now happen in minutes. People, however, still need time to process information, weigh choices, and build confidence in what they’re seeing.

After working with enterprise clients across industries, we’ve identified a pattern most organizations haven’t named yet. We call it the “tempo gap”: the point where machine speed begins to outpace human comprehension.

For years, digital systems largely operated at human tempo. A person searched for information, completed a task, or moved through a workflow, and the technology responded. Even sophisticated systems moved at a pace people could follow. AI changes that dynamic because systems are no longer just responding to requests. Increasingly, they interpret intent, generate recommendations, and move interactions forward before people have fully processed what’s happening. As AI becomes embedded across customer and employee experiences, the experience itself starts moving faster.

In our work, the effects show up in three recurring patterns. A traveler with a cancelled flight gets automatically rebooked before having time to compare options or understand the trade-offs. Customers move through financial applications so quickly they accept material terms without fully absorbing them. A patient filling out medical forms online finds sensitive information automatically populated before fully understanding how that data will be used.

John Dubois is EY Americas AI Strategy Leader.
John Dubois is EY Americas AI Strategy Leader.
courtesy of EY

Nothing is technically broken in these moments. In many cases, the systems are working exactly as designed, yet the experience still feels slightly off. People start double-checking information they normally would have accepted. Interactions intended to feel seamless create hesitation instead. These small moments of uncertainty usually trace back to a bigger assumption: that faster is always better.

In our experience advising enterprises on AI deployment, most organizations still approach it primarily as an efficiency initiative. The conversation tends to focus on automation, productivity, and speed. What gets overlooked is that accelerating workflows also changes the cognitive demands placed on the people moving through them. The question is no longer just whether a system works. It’s whether the interaction unfolds at a pace people can realistically understand and trust, especially in high-stakes moments, like financial decisions, healthcare, or anything involving sensitive data.

People may appreciate speed, but they still want to understand why a recommendation was made, what assumptions shaped it, and when they should step in. When that clarity disappears, trust weakens.

We’re already seeing the downstream effects in organizations we work with. Teams spend more time validating outputs they would previously have trusted. In some environments, workflows designed for speed begin slowing down again as manual review creeps back into the process.

The challenge for organizations is not deciding whether to move faster with AI. Most already are. The real question is where speed genuinely improves outcomes and where people still need context before moving forward. That’s why the next phase of AI adoption will likely depend less on raw automation and more on tempo alignment.

Organizations that get this right will design experiences that create confidence, not just efficiency. Sometimes that means accelerating decisions. Other times it means slowing the interaction down just enough for understanding and judgment to catch up. In some cases, it means surfacing uncertainty instead of hiding it. In others, it means adding a deliberate pause in an approval workflow, or recognizing when a customer needs reassurance, not another automated response.

The strongest AI experiences we’ve seen rely on intentional friction: not delays for their own sake, but deliberate moments designed to build confidence before action.

This runs counter to how many organizations have historically thought about digital experience design. For years, success was measured by removing friction and increasing speed. AI introduces a more complicated reality: sometimes a slightly slower interaction produces a better outcome.

That may become one of the defining lessons of this era of enterprise AI adoption: one we hope more organizations name before a regulator or a customer does it for them. Systems can process information instantly, but human confidence and trust still develop through understanding, context, and judgment. Organizations that ignore that reality risk creating experiences that work operationally but never fully earn customer confidence.

AI is already changing how quickly work moves through organizations. What remains harder is helping people feel confident enough to move at the same pace.

###

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

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