The survey, commissioned by tech education firm TripleTen, reveals a divide between digital etiquette and practical application. While some participants jokingly cite the need to stay on the good side of future robot overlords, others rely on a pragmatic assumption that polite phrasing improves output. Although no independent research confirms that conversational politeness grants users an advantage, experts acknowledge that tone, context, and specific framing do fundamentally shape the quality of generative AI responses.
Why Office Workers Are Being Polite to Their Chatbots
You realize AI lacks feelings, yet 86% of office workers still say “please” and “thank you” to their chatbots. A new survey of 2,000 U.S. employees suggests this isn't just about manners; users are convinced that courtesy nudges models toward more accurate, helpful responses during their daily workflow.

Beyond the social quirks of human-AI interaction, the data highlights a significant adoption gap in the workplace. Executives are nearly twice as likely to embrace AI compared to their staff, with 93% of leaders reporting usage against 70% of employees. Furthermore, 42% of executives feel they are ahead in mastering these tools, while only 12% of staff share that sentiment. The findings suggest that instead of focusing on digital manners, employees might find more value in narrowing the experience gap with their management.




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