STAMFORD, Conn., April 22, 2026
STAMFORD, Conn., April 22, 2026
Kayla Velnoskey
Director Analyst, Gartner
The rise of AI is amplifying long-standing challenges in how organizations design and deliver effective pay for performance programs.
We spoke with Kayla Velnoskey, Director, Analyst in the Gartner HR practice, about why it is urgent for CHROs to evolve pay for performance strategies in response to AI’s growing impact.
Journalists who would like to speak with Kayla regarding this topic can contact mary.baker@gartner.com or gerri.weinberger@gartner.com. Members of the media can reference this material in articles with proper attribution to Gartner.
A: Effective pay for performance relies on three foundational elements: a clear philosophy, fair assessment and meaningful differentiation. AI threatens these foundations by amplifying longstanding challenges, such as introducing new ambiguity around what should be rewarded, increasing the risk of inconsistency and bias in AI‑supported performance evaluations, and complicating already tight compensation decisions.
It’s necessary for organizations to adapt how they deliver the three foundational elements of successful pay for performance to adequately address the impact of AI. Specifically, CHROs should take three steps:
A: Employees are motivated strongly by pay for performance. A December 2025 Gartner survey of 1,622 respondents revealed that when employees believe there is a strong link between pay and performance they are up to 17% more productive versus when they do not.
As AI changes both how work gets done and creates new opportunities for evaluating performance, pay for performance strategy must evolve to reflect employees’ and managers’ new reality. If, for example, performance criteria are unable to capture real productivity gains from using AI, or if AI use in performance reviews creates biased assessments, organizations risk destroying this critical link between performance and pay that drives motivation.
A: AI can support faster and more consistent performance assessments by reducing administrative effort and synthesizing large volumes of data. According to the December 2025 Gartner survey, managers reported an average of four hours saved across different parts of the performance management process when using AI. However, without proper guardrails, using AI in performance management can open the organization up to risk.
Organizations should treat AI as an input to managerial judgment rather than a replacement for it, ensuring managers remain accountable for final evaluations and outcomes.
A: AI can help leaders explore trade‑offs in merit and bonus allocation, supporting more meaningful differentiation within constrained budgets. For example, AI can surface where small reallocations create outsized impact, flag pay outcomes that don’t align with performance data, or highlight unintended compression before decisions are finalized. Used this way, AI strengthens differentiation without replacing human judgment.
But vague or poorly explained AIdriven decisions can damage employee trust, especially in today’s era of pay transparency. To address this, organizations should combine both human and machine intelligence when using AI to help meaningfully differentiate pay. It’s important to use AI as a tool rather than a final decision maker.
Finally, CHROs must equip managers to confidently speak about how AI is being used in pay decisions, because if managers are uncomfortable explaining how AI has impacted that decision, they risk destroying trust in the fairness of pay decisions. When managers can clearly explain “how the decision was made” and “why it’s fair,” AI becomes a credibility enhancer rather than a trust risk.
Gartner clients can read more in the report: Adapt Pay for Performance for the Age of AI.
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Mary Baker
Gartner
mary.baker@gartner.com
Gerri Weinberger
Gartner
gerri.weinberger@gartner.com
Gartner (NYSE: IT) delivers actionable, objective business and technology insights that drive smarter decisions and stronger performance on an organization’s mission-critical priorities. To learn more, visit gartner.com.