Good morning. In Microsoft’s 2026 Work Trend Index, the tech giant examined who is building the skills and habits needed to succeed in an AI-powered workplace. Several findings should interest CFOs, particularly those trying to determine whether AI spending is translating into measurable business value.

For starters, Microsoft frames AI value as an operating-model issue, not simply a technology-adoption issue. The report finds that organizational factors, including culture, manager support, and talent practices, account for 67% of reported AI impact, compared with 32% attributed to individual mindset and behavior. For CFOs, that suggests AI ROI will depend on whether companies redesign workflows, incentives, and performance metrics around AI-enabled work. And finance chiefs are increasingly at the center of organizational AI strategy.

The research draws on expanded Microsoft 365 telemetry data, a survey of 20,000 AI users across 10 countries, and leadership perspectives from the 14 organizations in the Harvard Frontier Firm cohort.

The productivity findings are also notable. Microsoft reports that 66% of AI users say AI has allowed them to spend more time on high-value work, while 58% say they are producing work they could not have produced a year ago. That positions AI not only as a cost-efficiency lever, but also as a capacity-expansion tool that could reshape how companies allocate labor.

In addition, the report highlights a management challenge. Just 26% of AI users say their leadership is clearly and consistently aligned on AI strategy, and only 13% say they are rewarded for reinventing work with AI even when results are not immediate. That should matter to finance chiefs because misaligned incentives can turn AI investments into underused software rather than productivity gains.

Governance is another relevant theme. Microsoft says the number of active agents in the Microsoft 365 ecosystem grew 15-fold year over year, and 18-fold among large enterprises. As agents take on more, they also generate valuable signals: what worked, what failed, where outcomes drifted, according to the report. CFOs will likely want assurance that, as agents proliferate, companies have strong controls over identities, permissions, policy enforcement, lifecycle management, monitoring, and auditability.

Microsoft highlights productivity gains and organizational change, but there isn’t a focus on tying AI adoption to margin improvement, cost reduction, or payback periods. For CFOs evaluating large AI investments, that gap underscores that measuring AI’s financial impact at scale remains a work in progress.
 
Sheryl Estrada
sheryl.estrada@fortune.com

Leaderboard

Vitor Roque was promoted to EVP and CFO of BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company) (NYSE: BDX), a global medical technology company, effective May 7. Roque has served as interim CFO since December 2025. With more than 25 years at BD, Roque has held senior finance and operations roles across the company, most recently as senior vice president of finance and corporate financial planning and analysis.

Youssef Annali was appointed CFO of ICAT Logistics, a specialized logistics company. Annali brings more than two decades of senior finance leadership across global logistics and supply chain businesses. Annali joins ICAT from OIA Global, where he served as CFO for four years. Before OIA, he spent 11 years at CEVA Logistics, rising to CFO and EVP of finance for North America. Earlier in his career, he served in senior finance roles at Abbott, KPMG, and PricewaterhouseCoopers.

Big Deal

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday that the U.S. labor market added 115,000 jobs in April, which beat economist expectations. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.3%. Job gains occurred in health care, transportation and warehousing, and retail trade. However, federal government employment continued to decline.

Meanwhile, the “information sector”—where the BLS counts tech, telecom, data processing, and media jobs—lost another 13,000 jobs in April, while finance shed 11,000, Fortune reported. The monthly average this year has been about 9,000 jobs lost in information, and 12,000 in financial activities. 

Going deeper

In a new episode of Fortune 500: Titans and Disruptors of IndustryFortune’s Editor-in-Chief Alyson Shontell sat down with Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon to learn how he leads and what the next primary device after the smartphone could be. 

Many major smart device manufacturers use Qualcomm’s technology, ranging from physical chips in our phones to the 4G, 5G, and soon, 6G networks that connect them. But in the lightning-fast tech industry, what’s cutting-edge today can become obsolete tomorrow. Amon is prepared to bet the farm to stay ahead. 

Overheard

“The U.S. is currently suffering from a barbell economy, where growth is concentrated in capital-intensive AI at the top and low-wage services at the bottom. The middle, where the bulk of professional women sit, is being hollowed out.”

Katica Roy, the CEO and founder of Denver-based Pipeline, a SaaS company, writes in a Fortune opinion piece titled “America is shorting one of its best assets as the $38 trillion national debt runs out of control.”

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