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Generational conflict is costing sales organizations an estimated $56 billion in lost productivity annually

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In the high-stakes world of revenue orchestration, a quiet but costly friction is slowing down deals. It isn’t market volatility or budget cuts—it’s a fundamental disconnect between the generations tasked with closing the sale.

Steve Cox, CEO of the newly merged sales tech powerhouse SalesLoft and Clari, sat down with me recently to discuss a startling finding from their latest report: generational conflict is costing sales organizations an estimated $56 billion in lost productivity annually. That’s not a typo. Billion, with a B.

“When Boomers hear ‘AI makes you faster,’ what they really hear is ‘You’re too slow,’” Cox explains. Meanwhile, 39% of Gen Z sellers prefer to be managed by AI rather than a human, while many Baby Boomers admit they would prefer AI over working with a Gen Z colleague. This isolation creates a wedge where there should be a bridge.

The challenge facing today’s intergenerational workplace is real: 28% of Gen Z reps are actively searching for new jobs to avoid working with Boomers, and 19% of Boomers plan to retire early due to frustrations with Gen Z. This isn’t mere annoyance—it’s a failure to transfer critical skills. Boomers possess deep institutional knowledge and relationship-building expertise, the “face time” that closes complex deals. Gen Z brings digital fluency and speed. When these groups isolate themselves, organizations lose the benefits of both.

Yet within this friction lies tremendous opportunity. Here are five key insights from my conversation with Cox on how leaders can leverage AI to bridge the generational divide:

First, acknowledge the trust gap before attempting to solve it. Work-life balance has sparked a generational standoff: 71% of Gen Z believe Boomers value hours worked over results, and 56% blame Boomers for today’s toxic work culture. Meanwhile, 64% of Boomers say Gen Z prioritizes work-life balance over business needs. The data reveal that both generations are retreating rather than engaging. Leaders must name these dynamics openly before any technology solution can take hold.

Second, use AI as a collaborative bridge, not a replacement. Cox emphasizes that the solution isn’t simply deploying more software, but using AI to facilitate knowledge sharing. The data supports this: sellers believe AI can improve knowledge sharing (86%), bridge experience gaps (80%), and strengthen cross-generational communication (79%). When an AI agent can scrape the web for news and financial data on a prospect in seconds—a task that might take a human three hours—it satisfies Gen Z’s need for speed while freeing Boomers to focus on the relationship-building where they excel.

Third, recognize that teaming is a strategic skill. Technology alone cannot solve a cultural problem. Cox emphasizes that leaders must be intentional about creating cross-generational learning environments, pairing digital-native sellers with relationship-focused veterans to create best practices that blend traditional methods with modern tech adoption.

Fourth, position Gen X managers as translators. This often-overlooked generation sits perfectly positioned between digital natives and analog experts. They can serve as the human bridge while AI serves as the technological one.

Fifth, advocate for inclusive AI implementation. “We need to combine institutional knowledge with digital efficiency,” Cox notes. The goal of platforms like the combined SalesLoft-Clari system isn’t to choose between the old way versus the new way—it’s to use predictive revenue technology to validate both approaches.

The benefits of getting this right extend far beyond productivity metrics. Intergenerational workplaces that successfully leverage AI as neutral ground for collaboration can turn generational diversity from a liability into a competitive advantage. They preserve institutional wisdom while accelerating innovation. They create mentorship that flows in both directions.

As Cox summarizes, the imperative is clear: “Bridge the . . . it a bridge rather than a wedge.” In an era where AI is reshaping every aspect of business, the organizations that thrive won’t be those with the most advanced technology. They’ll be the ones that use technology to amplify what’s irreplaceably human, across every generation.

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