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    Your youngest employees may be your most valuable AI teachers

    June 20, 20265 Mins Read
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    I’ve built leadership programs at Amazon, Microsoft, and other companies. One mistake I often see is thinking that knowledge flows only from the top down. Senior leaders teach, junior employees learn, and expertise moves in just one direction.

    Traditionally, knowledge moved from senior leaders to new employees and from mentors to mentees. That approach still has value, but it’s no longer enough. Some of the most useful knowledge now belongs to those just entering the workforce. It’s not about being smarter; they simply grew up using tools like AI agents, generative workflows, and automation. Younger employees are comfortable with these tools, while many senior leaders are still learning to use them. Today, your youngest employees often have the most practical business knowledge to share.

    The knowledge gap in both directions

    Research from the International Workplace Group found that 82% of senior directors say younger employees’ AI-driven innovations have created new business opportunities, and 80% say help from younger colleagues allows them to focus on higher-value work. Meanwhile, 92% of Gen Z employees estimate they save an hour a day by using artificial intelligence tools for tasks such as summarizing meetings, analyzing data, and drafting documents.

    Most organizations don’t have a formal way to capture or share this advantage. This productivity boost is already in your company, mostly with younger employees, but there’s no system to transfer it to the leaders making key decisions.

    At the same time, Deloitte’s research shows that only 6% of Gen Z employees want traditional leadership roles. They’re not chasing titles; they’re chasing impact, skill building, and relevance.

    This means the mentoring model based on hierarchy and promotions does not align with where knowledge exists or with what motivates the people who have it.

    Flip the model

    Reverse mentoring isn’t new, but it’s more important than ever. Jack Welch piloted it at General Electric in 1999 to help leaders learn about the internet. Now, change is accelerating, and the knowledge gap is widening. 

    Companies such as Accenture, Target and Unilever have established reverse mentoring programs and have seen steady results. Senior leaders gain new perspectives. Younger employees gain visibility and early leadership experience. Both groups say trust improves.

    Most organizations don’t dive deep enough to see real results. Pairing a 25-year-old employee with a VP isn’t a program; it’s a conversation. What makes it work is having structure, clear goals, and accountability. Both people need to have something real at stake.

    Leaders teaching leaders

    The best approach isn’t just reverse mentoring. It’s about changing how leaders teach each other, knowledge moving in all directions, and teaching being seen as a key leadership skill at every level. 

    From my experience, lasting programs do certain key things: match people to specific skill gaps, not hierarchy; create short feedback loops (such as monthly check-ins) to spot problems early; and measure impact like promotions, retention, and actual knowledge use, not just participation.

    Here are the three elements that matter:

    1. Traditional mentoring anchors development. Experience, judgment, situational leadership, and the ability to navigate complexity are irreplaceable. Senior leaders still have important lessons to teach, and that will always matter.

    2. Reverse mentoring is structured, not for show. Clearly identify where younger employees have the edge, such as in AI fluency, tool familiarity, and emerging workflows. Set up pairings with clear goals and timelines, and accountability on both sides. Senior leaders need to participate with real curiosity. Performative participation can undermine the program, and people notice.

    3. Peer mentoring helps fill the gaps. Small groups of leaders at similar levels can share context, real challenges, and pressure-testing decisions. 

    When these three elements work together, teaching becomes a leadership competency, not a side activity, and it changes culture faster than any training program will.

    What makes it work or fail

    The details of matching, onboarding, and measuring outcomes matter, but they’re not what determine whether a program actually delivers. What determines it is culture, and specifically whether the senior leaders in the organization model the behavior they’re asking everyone else to adopt.

    When a CEO shares lessons learned from a younger colleague, whether in a meeting or by acknowledging the source of an idea, it sends a powerful signal. This approach shows humility is normal and frames learning from younger employees as a sign of confidence rather than inadequacy.

    If that message is missing, the program usually fades after a couple of cycles. Participants check the boxes, but nobody changes how they work. The organization congratulates itself for having tried.

    Research shows employees stay 41% longer at companies with strong development programs. That’s not just about mentoring; it’s a retention and succession strategy, and should be in your business case.

    The bottom line

    When you ask a 25-year-old to teach a VP something, you’re doing more than sharing knowledge. You’re sending a clear message: Their knowledge and perspective are valuable. For a generation that’s often skeptical of big companies and wants to be seen as contributors, this signal lands in a way no engagement survey ever will.

    The leaders I’ve watched truly engage in reverse mentoring don’t just learn new tools. They learn to see things in new ways. They become better listeners and get closer to what’s really happening in their organizations. That’s not just a program result; it’s a real leadership upgrade.

    The knowledge already exists in your organization. The real question is whether you’ve built a system that allows it to move and be shared.



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