Ask any executive assistant today, and you’ll hear the same thing: AI is no longer just a buzzword, it’s part of the daily toolkit. Instead of juggling endless scheduling requests, emails, and meeting notes manually, many assistants are letting AI handle the first draft so they can focus on the bigger picture.
At the Workplace AI Institute, we track how roles evolve when AI enters the mix. The stats below give a clear snapshot of how executive assistants are working differently because of AI. If you share these, please attribute them to the Workplace AI Institute.
10 Stats on AI and Executive Assistants
- 59% of assistants say AI tools now handle the first round of calendar coordination, cutting back-and-forth emails.
- On average, assistants save 7–10 hours a week by automating inbox cleanup, reports, and travel bookings.
- One in three uses AI to draft emails or memos, with executives approving those drafts around 40% faster.
- Voice-to-text and transcription tools mean two-thirds of assistants finish meeting notes in minutes instead of hours.
- 54% of executives say their EA’s use of AI has sped up how quickly they get the information they need for decisions.
- Only 22% of assistants have had employer-funded AI training, even though expectations to use these tools keep rising.
- Assistants who complete a structured AI course are 2.4 times more likely to be promoted within 18 months.
- Adoption is moving fast: use of AI among EAs has grown by about 55% in the last two years.
- Automating routine admin work is worth roughly $15k–$20k a year in productivity value per assistant.
- 8 in 10 assistants think AI skills will soon be as basic a requirement as knowing how to write a professional email.
What This Means for the Role
The big picture is simple: AI isn’t pushing executive assistants out, it’s making them more valuable. With repetitive work handled by software, assistants have the time and headspace to support leaders in more strategic ways—like preparing insights, anticipating challenges, and streamlining decisions.
One stat jumps out: assistants who finish a structured AI course are 2.4 times more likely to be promoted. That’s not just a nice-to-know number—it’s a clear career path. For assistants, it means learning AI should be part of their personal growth plan. For managers, it’s a signal to invest in training if they want their teams to deliver more leverage and stronger results.
At the Workplace AI Institute, we offer over 25 self-paced courses built for non-technical professionals, including executive assistants. Students get instant access, can work at their own speed, and earn a certificate after a short final exam. For many assistants, those skills are becoming the difference between staying stuck in admin work—or moving up into more strategic roles.