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“The more [AI] literacy you have, the more you’re going to understand how to be confident with it and use it to your advantage. And the more attractive you’re going to be to organizations like [Goldman Sachs].” – John Waldron – Goldman Sachs

The competitive value of AI is shifting from novelty to judgement. Once the basic tools are widely available, the advantage no longer comes from simply having access to them; it comes from knowing when they are trustworthy, where they are brittle, and how to use them without diluting decision quality. That is the practical force behind the argument that greater AI literacy makes a candidate more confident, more useful, and more attractive to large firms. In a market where employers are flooded with generic applications and workers can increasingly automate routine analysis, the scarce asset is not exposure to AI as a buzzword but fluency in its limits, workflows, and business consequences.

In financial services, that distinction matters even more because the sector runs on controlled judgement. Banks, asset managers, and advisory businesses do not merely need staff who can prompt a chatbot. They need people who can embed AI into processes that already carry regulatory, reputational, and operational risk. A model that drafts a memo quickly is helpful only if the user can verify the assumptions, spot hallucinated facts, understand data lineage, and decide what should never be delegated. That combination of speed and scepticism is what firms are trying to hire for, because the cost of getting it wrong can show up in compliance breaches, client mistrust, or poorly timed strategic decisions 1.

Why literacy now commands a premium

The labour market tends to reward scarce complementary skills more than raw tool familiarity. Early in a technology cycle, companies hire specialists who build the systems. Later, once the systems are embedded, they prize employees who can use them to improve revenue, efficiency, and judgement. AI is moving through that second stage quickly. Basic usage is becoming common, but responsible use remains uneven. A junior analyst may know how to ask a model for a summary; a stronger analyst knows how to structure the prompt, cross-check outputs, quantify uncertainty, and distinguish between a helpful draft and a misleading answer. That gap can be more valuable than another credential because it is directly tied to productivity and risk management.

This is especially true in firms that handle complex, high-stakes information. A large institution can afford to have thousands of employees experimenting with AI only if it also has a workforce able to recognise where experimentation ends and governance begins. The real premium, then, is on people who can move between business context and machine output. They understand that a model can accelerate research but cannot replace responsibility. They can use AI to widen coverage, compare scenarios, and reduce administrative drag, while still preserving human oversight over material judgements. In practice, that makes them easier to trust with broader responsibilities, which is precisely what makes them attractive to organisations that care about scale and control.

The Goldman Sachs context

Goldman Sachs has long been associated with elite talent, operational discipline, and a willingness to adopt new technology when it can be controlled and monetised. In that setting, comments about AI literacy are not simply motivational language for job seekers. They reflect a broader institutional reality: the firm, like many of its peers, wants people who can harness new tools without creating disorder. The most valuable employees are rarely those who chase every new platform. They are the ones who can identify a use case, test it, secure approval where necessary, and then integrate it into a repeatable process.

John Waldron’s warning in the source material against trying too many AI initiatives at once is telling in this respect 1. Large firms are attractive precisely because they have resources, data, and senior sponsorship, but those same advantages can tempt them into scattered experimentation. A sprawling portfolio of pilots may generate internal excitement and external headlines, yet still fail to alter the actual economics of the business. AI literacy helps avoid that trap. If teams understand the difference between a promising demonstration and a scalable workflow, they are more likely to prioritise the use cases that matter: client servicing, document review, internal knowledge retrieval, surveillance, coding assistance, and decision support.

There is also a talent-signalling dimension. When a top-tier financial institution indicates that AI fluency is desirable, it effectively reshapes the recruitment market. Candidates begin to present themselves not only as specialists in finance, law, operations, or technology, but as professionals who can connect those fields to AI-enabled execution. The institution benefits by widening its pool of adaptable talent; applicants benefit because they can differentiate themselves through applied competence rather than generic enthusiasm. That is why the statement resonates far beyond a single firm. It reflects an emerging hiring standard.

What AI literacy actually means

The phrase can sound vague unless it is grounded in practice. In a serious workplace, AI literacy includes understanding how generative models produce outputs, why they can sound persuasive when wrong, and how training data, prompts, and retrieval methods affect quality. It includes knowing that a model can compress large amounts of information but may not know when a source is outdated, incomplete, or contextually inappropriate. It also includes a working grasp of governance: what data can be shared, what must stay within protected systems, and what evidence is required before AI-assisted work can be relied upon in a client-facing or regulated setting.

More importantly, literacy is behavioural as much as technical. Someone can be technically aware of AI and still use it carelessly. A truly literate user treats outputs as drafts, not verdicts. They triangulate across sources, keep an eye out for confirmation bias, and avoid automating tasks whose error rate would be unacceptable. In finance, this might mean using AI to summarise a research call, but not to invent a valuation thesis; to draft an internal memo, but not to issue an investment recommendation without full review. That distinction is one reason the market rewards experience: seasoned professionals often know where judgement should stay human even if the machine is faster.

There is a softer but still important dimension as well. AI literacy can make employees more confident because it reduces intimidation. Many workers worry that the technology is either magical or threatening. In reality, its utility depends on disciplined use. Once users understand that, they are more willing to test it, adopt it, and shape it to their own workflow. Confidence here is not bravado; it is operational calm. A calm user is more likely to exploit the technology productively and less likely to either overtrust it or reject it outright.

The strategic tension: scale versus selectivity

Large firms face a familiar problem whenever a new general-purpose technology arrives. They know it could improve almost everything, but they cannot improve everything at once. If every department launches separate pilots, the institution can end up with duplicated tools, unclear ownership, inconsistent controls, and no clear path to value. The lesson is not that experimentation should stop. It is that experimentation must be sequenced. Good AI strategy looks less like a frenzy of launches and more like a portfolio managed with discipline.

That tension explains why AI literacy is so valuable at the employee level. Individuals who understand the technology can help firms choose the right battles. They can identify where automation saves time, where search and retrieval improve knowledge access, and where a human bottleneck is the real problem rather than the model itself. They are also better positioned to push back against overclaims. If a process is already high quality and low friction, layering AI on top may add risk without real benefit. If a workflow is fragmented, repetitive, and information-heavy, the same tool may be transformative. Literate employees can tell the difference.

This matters because the temptation in any hype cycle is to mistake activity for progress. Firms can spend a great deal on proof-of-concept work without changing front-line performance. They can also underinvest if they fear every change will create compliance headaches. The balance lies in disciplined adoption, and that requires staff who know enough to participate intelligently. In that sense, AI literacy becomes a form of organisational capital. It helps the firm avoid both reckless enthusiasm and defensive inertia.

Why employers care about confidence, not just competence

Confidence is often misread as personality, but in this context it is closer to calibrated self-assurance. Employers want people who can use tools decisively without becoming dependent on them. A confident AI-literate employee can judge when a model is suitable for a task, when it needs extra human review, and when it should be left out entirely. That reduces supervisory burden and increases throughput. It also makes collaboration easier, because colleagues can trust that the person is neither blindly evangelising nor reflexively sceptical.

For a firm like Goldman Sachs, the attraction of such employees is obvious. Large organisations need people who can work across teams, absorb new systems quickly, and translate between technical and commercial languages. AI literacy signals exactly those qualities. It implies a willingness to learn, an ability to adapt, and a habit of thinking in process terms rather than merely task terms. Those are the traits that scale. They are also the traits most likely to matter as AI becomes embedded in everyday work rather than confined to specialist labs.

There is another reason confidence matters: it supports responsible speed. In competitive markets, slow adoption can be costly, but uncontrolled adoption is worse. If employees know what they are doing, they can move faster without increasing error rates. That is a particularly valuable combination in financial institutions, where small efficiency gains compound across teams but mistakes can cascade. AI literacy, then, is not only about employability. It is about being the kind of professional who makes technology safe to use at speed.

Debates and objections

Not everyone will welcome the emphasis on AI literacy as a hiring advantage. Some will argue that it risks turning a broad human capability into another credential race, where candidates feel pressured to advertise fluency they barely possess. Others will say the phrase is overused and too elastic, capable of meaning anything from casual chatbot use to genuine technical understanding. Those objections have merit. Organisations can be sloppy in how they assess proficiency, and applicants can overstate their experience. If a firm rewards surface-level familiarity, it may end up with employees who can demo a tool but cannot govern it.

There is also a concern about displacement. The more employers value AI fluency, the more workers without access to training may be left behind. That creates a risk of widening inequality within firms and across the labour market. Professionals who already have strong networks and learning opportunities can deepen their advantage, while others struggle to keep pace. A serious response to that problem is not to ignore AI literacy, but to make it teachable. Firms that want the benefits of the skill must invest in structured training, not just expect employees to self-educate.

A further objection is that some tasks should remain untouched by AI because they depend on trust, discretion, and the ability to explain reasoning transparently. This is particularly true in regulated environments. The more a process affects clients, markets, or legal obligations, the more carefully AI must be introduced. Literacy helps here too, because it gives workers the vocabulary to argue for restraint where necessary. Knowing how to use a tool also means knowing when not to use it.

Why it matters now

The larger significance of the statement is that it captures a new career hierarchy. As AI becomes more common, the premium moves away from simple exposure and towards informed judgement. People who can use the technology well, question it properly, and place it inside a controlled workflow will stand out. That matters to employers because they are not merely buying output; they are buying judgement under uncertainty. It matters to workers because the path to opportunity increasingly runs through practical fluency rather than passive familiarity. And it matters to institutions because the success of AI programmes will depend less on announcements than on whether ordinary employees know how to turn the technology into durable advantage.

The result is a subtle but important shift in how talent is defined. AI literacy is becoming part of the modern professional toolkit in the same way that spreadsheets, coding familiarity, or data interpretation once became baseline expectations in earlier cycles. The people who master it earliest will not just appear more technologically current. They will be better placed to earn trust, shoulder responsibility, and help their organisations convert a powerful technology into an actual business edge 1.

 

References

1. Scaling RIA Growth: The Goldman Sachs AI Playbook – ETF Database – 2026-05-13 – https://etfdb.com/future-etfs-content-hub/goldman-sachs-ai-playbook/

 

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