I've been sitting here in my office, contemplating something that's both fascinating and concerning. After weeks of focus groups with legal marketing professionals, I've uncovered what might be the worst-kept secret in the industry: your marketing team is using AI tools—they're just not doing it at the office.
One marketing director confessed to me point-blank: "I have to take work home or use my phone in private because they won't allow us to use AI tools at the office. It's ridiculous—I'm literally hiding in the bathroom using ChatGPT on my personal device to draft content that my firm will ultimately publish."
A study of American workers in August 2024, found that a third of workers in the U.S. had used Generative AI at work in the last week. The study showed that AI use at work has become widespread across industries—65% of marketers are using AI tools, yet many organizations remain blissfully unaware of how extensively AI has infiltrated their workflows.
In an article "AI in organizations: Some tactics," Ethan Mollick, an associate Professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, who studies the effects of artificial intelligence on work, entrepreneurship, and education, puts it bluntly: "We know that individuals are seeing productivity gains at work for some important tasks." He notes that studies show consultants completed tasks 25% more quickly using AI, and coding productivity improved by 26% with even primitive AI assistance.
Let's be clear: Your blanket prohibition isn't working. It's just creating a shadow IT system with zero oversight, zero governance, and zero institutional benefit.
While you're busy drafting policies prohibiting AI use, your competitors are experiencing dramatic productivity gains in areas that directly impact client acquisition and retention:
These aren't theoretical advantages—they're happening right now. Just not at your firm.
I understand the hesitation. Client confidentiality is sacred. Unauthorized practice of law concerns are legitimate. Factual accuracy matters tremendously.
But blanket prohibitions address none of these concerns effectively. They simply push AI use underground, creating greater risks than the thoughtful integration you're avoiding.
Consider this perspective: The firms positioning themselves for the next decade aren't asking "should we allow AI?" They're asking "how do we harness AI while maintaining our ethical obligations?"
Mollick argues that organizations should "align their award systems" to encourage AI innovation. He suggests offering "really big awards for really big gains. Think of cash prizes that cover months of salary. Promotions. Corner offices. The ability to work from home forever." These aren't extravagant costs compared to the transformative potential of employee-driven AI innovation.
Here's what leading firms are doing instead of prohibition:
In Mollick's words, you need to "reduce the fear" around AI use. When employees worry that revealing productivity gains might lead to layoffs or increased workloads without recognition, they'll simply hide their AI use.
You have two options:
Option 1: Maintain your prohibition and watch as your marketing team continues using AI tools anyway—just without governance, training, or institutional knowledge-sharing.
Option 2: Acknowledge reality, implement thoughtful guidelines, and turn what's currently a chaotic underground practice into a strategic advantage.
The firms that choose Option 2 will outpace those clinging to Option 1. It's not just about embracing new technology—it's about recognizing that prohibition rarely works when the benefits of breaking the rules are so substantial.
Mollick puts it perfectly: "The innovation talent for AI is inside your organization. You need to create the opportunity for it to flourish."
I've seen enough marketing plans and competitive analyses to know which firms will still be thriving a decade from now. They're the ones that understand technology is neither inherently good nor bad—it's a tool whose impact depends entirely on how thoughtfully we integrate it.
Your marketing team is already using AI. The only question is whether they'll be using it for you or despite you.
What's your firm's approach to AI tools? I'd love to hear about your experiences—the good, the bad, and the surprisingly effective. Comment below or reach out directly.