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Explore the Findings

1: Employees want AI at work—and they won’t wait for companies to catch up.



2: For employees, AI raises the bar and breaks the career ceiling.



3: The rise of the AI power user—and what they reveal about the future.



Share

2024 Work Trend Index Annual Reportfrom Microsoft and LinkedIn
May 8, 2024
AI at Work Is Here. Now Comes the Hard PartEmployees want AI, leaders are
looking for a path forward.
May 8, 2024
Illustration by Ben Wiseman

The data is in: 2024 is the year AI at work gets real. Use of generative AI has
nearly doubled in the last six months,1 with 75% of global knowledge workers
using it. And employees, struggling under the pace and volume of work, are
bringing their own AI to work. While leaders agree AI is a business imperative,
many believe their organization lacks a plan and vision to go from individual
impact to applying AI to drive the bottom line. The pressure to show immediate
ROI is making leaders inert, even in the face of AI inevitability.

We’ve come to the hard part of any tech disruption: moving past experimentation
to business transformation. Just as we saw with the advent of the internet or
the PC, business transformation comes with broad adoption. Organizations that
apply AI to drive growth, manage costs, and deliver greater value to customers
will pull ahead.

At the same time, the labor market is set to shift again—with AI playing a major
role. Despite fears of job loss, leaders report a talent shortage for key roles.
And as more employees eye a career move, managers say AI aptitude could rival
experience. For many employees, AI will raise the bar but break the career
ceiling.

To help leaders and organizations overcome AI inertia, Microsoft and LinkedIn
looked at how AI will reshape work and the labor market broadly, surveying
31,000 people across 31 countries, identifying labor and hiring trends from
LinkedIn, and analyzing trillions of Microsoft 365 productivity signals as well
as research with Fortune 500 customers. The data points to insights every leader
and professional needs to know—and actions they can take—when it comes to AI’s
implications for work.

Download the executive summaryDownload the full report
1. Employees want AI at work—and they won’t wait for companies to catch up.


Already, AI is being woven into the workplace at an unexpected scale. 75% of
knowledge workers use AI at work today, and 46% of users started using it less
than six months ago. It’s paying off: 

 * Users say AI helps them save time (90%), focus on their most important work
   (85%), be more creative (84%), and enjoy their work more (83%). 

 * The heaviest Teams users (the top 5%) summarized 8 hours of meetings using
   Copilot in the month of March, the equivalent of an entire workday.2

“We’re at the forefront of integrating AI to not just work faster, but to work
smarter. It’s our responsibility as organizational leaders to ensure that this
technology elevates our teams’ creativity and aligns with our ethical values.”

—Karim R. Lakhani, Chair, Digital Data Design Institute at Harvard, and Dorothy
& Michael Hintze Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School



While most leaders agree AI is a necessity, the pressure to show immediate ROI
is making leaders move slowly.

 * 79% of leaders agree their company needs to adopt AI to stay competitive, but
   59% worry about quantifying the productivity gains of AI.

 * This uncertainty is stalling vision: 60% of leaders worry their
   organization’s leadership lacks a plan and vision to implement AI.

Three Out of Four People Use AI at Work  

Usage nearly doubled in the last six months.

Doughnut-style chart shows 75% of people use AI at work, of which 46% only
started using it less than six months ago.

Survey Questions:  
How often do you use generative artificial intelligence (AI) for your work? 
How long have you been using generative artificial intelligence (AI) at work?

Download this chart

Without guidance or clearance from the top, employees are taking things into
their own hands and keeping AI use under wraps: 

 * 78% of AI users are bringing their own AI tools to work (BYOAI)—it’s even
   more common at small and medium-sized companies (80%). 

 * And it’s not just Gen Z—BYOAI cuts across all generations. 

 * 52% of people who use AI at work are reluctant to admit to using it for their
   most important tasks.

 * 53% of people who use AI at work worry that using it on important work tasks
   makes them look replaceable.

This approach means missing out on the benefits that come from strategic AI use
at scale. It also puts company data at risk in an environment where leaders’ #1
concern for the year ahead is cybersecurity and data privacy.

BYOAI Is Not Just for Gen Z

Employees across every age group are bringing their own AI tools to work.



Survey Question:
Are the generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools you use at work provided
by your organization? 

Download this chart

Another driver of BYOAI: work has accelerated faster than employees’ ability to
keep up. 

 * 68% of people say they struggle with the pace and volume of work, and 46%
   feel burned out.

 * Email overload persists—85% of emails are read in under 15 seconds, and the
   typical person has to read about 4 emails for every 1 they send.3 

 * Meetings and after-hours work are holding steady at their post-pandemic
   highs, and the workday still skews toward communication: in the Microsoft 365
   apps, users spend 60% of their time on emails, chats, and meetings, and only
   40% in creation apps like Word and PowerPoint.4

“These findings align perfectly with how our brains manage the trade-offs
between routine task execution and innovation—different kinds of thinking
supported by two distinct but interacting neural networks in the brain. When
we’re constantly switching, we don’t work as well. AI can help liberate workers
from menial work and enable innovation and creativity to flourish.”

—Michael Platt, neuroscientist and professor at the Wharton School of the
University of Pennsylvania



As AI use surges ahead, leaders who are “extremely familiar” with AI see its
potential to be as transformational as the shift from a typewriter to a
computer. Within the next five years, 41% of these leaders expect to redesign
business processes from the ground up with AI. In the same time frame, they
anticipate orchestrating (38%) and training a team of AI bots (42%), and
ensuring the ethical use of AI (47%) will be a core part of their job. 

The data is clear: People are overwhelmed with digital debt and under duress at
work—and they are turning to AI for relief. The opportunity for every leader is
to channel this momentum into ROI.

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2. For employees, AI raises the bar and breaks the career ceiling.


We also see AI beginning to impact the job market. While AI and job loss are top
of mind for many, the data offers a more nuanced view—one with a hidden talent
shortage, employees itching for a career change, and massive opportunity for
those willing to skill up on AI. 

 * Leaders are hiring: The majority (55%) of leaders say they’re concerned about
   having enough talent to fill roles in the year ahead. These leaders sit
   across functions, but the number jumps to 60% or higher for those in
   cybersecurity, engineering, and creative design. 

 * Professionals are looking: While some professionals worry AI will replace
   their job (45%), about the same share (46%) say they’re considering quitting
   in the year ahead—higher than the 40% who said the same ahead of 2021’s Great
   Reshuffle. And in the US, LinkedIn studies show a 14% increase in job
   applications per role since last fall, with 85% of professionals considering
   a new job this year.5

The Hidden Talent Shortage

While employees fear job loss due to AI, most leaders worry they can’t fill key
roles.



Survey Question:
When you think about your company in the year ahead, how much of a concern are
each of the following? 

Download this chart

Leaders have already made their landgrab for technical AI talent, with hiring up
323% in the past eight years. Now they’re turning their sights to non-technical
talent with AI aptitude—the skills to use generative AI tools like ChatGPT and
Copilot:

 * 66% of leaders say they wouldn’t hire someone without AI skills.

 * 71% say they’d rather hire a less experienced candidate with AI skills than a
   more experienced candidate without them.

 * And junior candidates may have a new edge: 77% of leaders say, with AI,
   early-in-career talent will be given greater responsibilities. 

“Over the past few decades, companies have been renegotiating the psychological
contract—the why of work—with their employees, influenced by new generations,
labor trends, and the pandemic. Now companies must renegotiate the ‘operational
contract’—the how of work—with their employees as AI puts more power into the
hands of workers in terms of the way the job gets done.”

—Constance Noonan Hadley, Organizational Psychologist, Institute for Life at
Work and Boston University Questrom School of Business



While leaders recognize the value of bringing on new employees with AI aptitude,
they’re missing the value of developing their own people:

 * 45% of US executives are not currently investing in AI tools or products for
   employees.6

 * Only 39% of people globally who use AI at work have gotten AI training from
   their company.

 * Only 25% of companies are planning to offer training on generative AI this
   year, further cementing this training deficit.7

The New Hiring Imperative

AI aptitude takes center stage. 

Three donut-style charts showing that early-in-career talent will get greater
responsibilities with AI (77%); that leaders are more likely to hire a less
experienced candidate with AI skills than a more experienced one without them
(71%); and that leaders would not hire someone without AI skills (66%). 

Survey Questions: 
To what extent do you agree or disagree with the following statements about
generative artificial intelligence's (AI’s) impact on skills?  
◦ I would be more likely to hire a less experienced candidate with AI skills
than a more experienced candidate without AI skills  
◦ In considering job candidates, I would not hire someone without AI skills
◦ Because they can delegate more work to AI, early-in-career talent will be
given greater responsibilities

Download this chart

Professionals aren’t waiting for official guidance or training—they’re skilling
up.

 * 76% say they need AI skills to remain competitive in the job market.   

 * 69% of people say AI can help get them promoted faster, and even more (79%)
   say AI skills will broaden their job opportunities.

 * In the past six months, the use of LinkedIn Learning courses designed to
   build AI aptitude has spiked 160% among non-technical professionals, with
   roles like project managers, architects, and administrative assistants
   looking to skill up most.

 * We’ve also seen a 142x increase in LinkedIn members globally adding AI skills
   like ChatGPT and Copilot to their profiles—with writers, designers, and
   marketers topping the list. Marketers are interested for good reason. Two of
   the top ways B2B marketers say they plan to use generative AI this year
   include increasing efficiency to focus on higher value work (55%) and
   creating optimized and engaging content that resonates with target audiences
   (51%). When it comes to industries, surprisingly, administrative and support
   services, real estate, and retail lead the way—ahead of the tech industry.

For the vast majority of people, AI isn’t replacing their job but transforming
it, and their next job might be a role that doesn’t exist yet:

 * Globally, skills are projected to change by 50% by 2030 (from 2016)—and
   generative AI is expected to accelerate this change to 68%. 

 * More than two-thirds (68%) of this year’s LinkedIn’s Jobs on the Rise
   (fastest-growing roles in the US) didn’t exist 20 years ago. 

 * 12% of recruiters say they are already creating new roles tied specifically
   to the use of generative AI.

 * Head of AI is emerging as a new must-have leadership role—a job that tripled
   over the past five years and grew by more than 28% in 2023.

AI Aptitude Heats Up Across Roles and Industries

AI is going mainstream, and creative professionals are skilling up fast.

Download this chart
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1 / 3

And just as we saw with flexible work options, offering AI access could help
companies attract top talent:

 * LinkedIn job posts that mention artificial intelligence or generative AI have
   seen 17% greater application growth over the past two years compared to job
   posts that don’t mention them. 

 * In another study, 54% of early-in-career and individual contributor
   employees—the future of the workforce—said that access to AI would influence
   their choice of employer. 

 * In fact, 22% of recruiters already say they’re updating job descriptions to
   reflect the usage of generative AI in the role.

 * And future-looking organizations are already taking action. Many of
   LinkedIn’s Top Companies this year—including JPMorgan Chase, Procter &
   Gamble, and AT&T—are offering their teams AI learning opportunities to drive
   transformation at scale.

These are signs that AI could be a rising tide that elevates skills across roles
and industries. Entry-level workers will take on more strategic projects, while
uniquely human skills like management, relationship building, negotiation, and
critical thinking will come to the fore for employees at all levels.
Organizations that understand this will retain and attract the best talent, and
professionals who skill up will have the edge.

3. The rise of the AI power user—and what they reveal about the future.


In our research, four types of AI users emerged on a spectrum—from skeptics who
rarely use AI to power users who use it extensively, with novices and explorers
in between. When we studied the difference between skeptics and power users we
saw notable gaps, not only between how they work but how they feel about work.

The Power User Payoff of AI at Work

Power users are reshaping the workday and reaping the benefits. 



Skeptics are at least familiar with AI, but they only use it a few times a month
(if ever). They say AI saves them 10 minutes or less per day. Novices are only
somewhat familiar with AI (if at all) and use it only a few times a month (if
ever). They say AI saves them 30 minutes or less per day. Explorers are only
somewhat familiar with AI (if at all) and use it a few times a month or once a
week. They say AI saves them between 5 and 30 minutes per day. Power Users are
at least familiar with AI and use it at least several times per week. They say
it saves them more than 30 minutes per day.

_________________

Survey Questions: 
When using artificial intelligence (AI) at work, how frequently do you do each
of the following? 
We’d now like you to reflect on how you feel about using artificial intelligence
(AI) in your work. To what extent do you agree or disagree with the following
statements? 

Download this chart

Power users are familiar to extremely familiar with AI, using it at work at
least several times a week and saving more than 30 minutes a day. And it’s
paying off: power users say AI makes their overwhelming workload more manageable
(92%), boosts their creativity (92%), and helps them focus on the most important
work (93%)—and it helps them feel more motivated (91%) and enjoy work more
(91%).

The path to becoming a power user starts with developing new habits. Power users
are 68% more likely to frequently experiment with different ways of using AI—in
fact, it’s the #1 predictor of whether someone will be a power user or not. When
compared to other survey respondents, they’re also more likely to frequently
pause before a task and ask themselves if AI can help (+49%), to keep trying if
they don’t get the perfect response the first time (+30%), and to research and
try new prompts (+56%). Power users also bookend their day with AI—using it to
start the day (85%) and get ready for the following workday (85%).

Power users have also reoriented their work patterns in fundamental ways. They
are 56% more likely to use AI to catch up on missed meetings, to analyze
information (+51%), to design visual content (+49%), to interact with customers
(+49%), and to brainstorm or problem-solve (+37%). And they’re already moving
past individual tasks: they’re 66% more likely to redesign their business
processes and workflows with AI.

The research also shows that power users are empowered by a different kind of
organization. At their companies:

 * Senior leaders lean in: AI power users are 61% more likely to hear from their
   CEO about the importance of using generative AI at work, 40% more likely to
   hear from the leader of their department, and 42% more likely to hear from
   their manager’s manager. 

 * Company culture is change-ready: AI power users are 53% more likely to
   receive encouragement from leadership to consider how AI can transform their
   function and 18% more likely to say their company encourages innovation.

 * They get tailored training: AI power users are 37% more likely to say their
   company has a virtual learning program. They’re also more likely to have
   received training on prompt writing (+37%), how to use AI for their role or
   function (+35%), or specific use cases such as writing or analyzing data
   (+32%).

“To stay ahead of the curve, we’ve made AI training a priority to ensure
everyone can leverage the power of Copilot for Microsoft 365 and other AI
solutions. We also launched the GenAI Academy, supporting employee growth and
development with the aim of increasing ambassadors and GenAI power users across
the globe. We are already seeing benefits that are transforming the way we work
and innovate.”

—Sheila Jordan, SVP, Chief Digital Technology Officer, Honeywell



AI power users provide a window into the future—revealing what’s possible when
employees embrace new ways of working and leaders lean in.

COPILOT STUDY: HOW AI COULD RESHAPE THE WORKDAY



Microsoft researchers designed a six-month randomized control trial of 60
Copilot customers across industries. The study is the first mass-scale
observation of 3,000 individuals using AI in their natural work environment with
no interventions from the researchers to encourage use. Preliminary results show
how AI could reshape the anatomy of the workday in fundamental ways—reducing
time spent in inboxes, making meetings more valuable, and increasing time spent
on high-value focus work.

Emails: Overall, Copilot users read 11% fewer individual emails and spent 4%
less time interacting with them. The customers who saw the most impact spent
25%–45% less time reading emails.

Meetings: In some companies time spent in meetings increased, in others it
decreased. One hypothesis is that AI makes meetings more valuable—as stores of
information and a shortcut to creation, like a brainstorming meeting, easily
turned into a first draft. For some companies, the increased efficiency leads to
fewer meetings, and at others the increased value leads to more. As AI
capabilities progress, researchers expect this effect to continue—allowing us to
reduce time in some meetings while making the meetings we do have more valuable.

Documents: Overall, Copilot users edited 10% more documents in Word, Excel, and
PowerPoint—the companies that saw the largest impact noticed a 20% increase.
This may suggest that people are repurposing the time they save for high-value
focus work like creating and consuming information.



The Path Forward


The opportunity ahead for leaders is to channel employee enthusiasm for AI into
business transformation. This will look different for every organization, but
here’s how to get started.

 * Identify a business problem, then apply AI: There are efficiency gains to be
   had across every function—the key is to pick a process and apply AI. For
   example, start with customer service and focus on improving call-handling
   time. Global advertising network dentsu applied AI to its creative
   development process. Estée Lauder is using it to reimagine product
   development and customer experience. 

 * Take a top-down, bottom-up approach: Going from experimentation to
   transformation requires engagement at every level of the organization, from
   the CEO to the entry-level employee. Business gains will come when you enlist
   your business line leaders to activate teams around AI. As we’ve rolled out
   Copilot at Microsoft, we’ve relied on internal champions at all levels to
   model and spread AI enthusiasm and aptitude.    

 * Prioritize training: AI power users aren’t doing it on their own—they receive
   ongoing training, both on universal tasks and uses more tailored to their
   role and function. LinkedIn Learning is a great place to start to skill up,
   and the Copilot Scenario Library provides use cases for specific roles and
   functions.

We’ve arrived at a pivotal moment for AI at work. Just as we look back at the
pre-PC era, we’ll one day wonder how work got done without AI. Already, AI is
helping people be more creative and productive, and giving job seekers an edge.
Over time, it will change every aspect of work. As we reach the hard part of
this tech disruption—turning experimentation into tangible business
impact—companies that face the challenge head-on will surge ahead. In this
moment, fortune favors the bold.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



See how the data compares for small and medium-sized businesses and in US
metropolitan areas. Learn how Microsoft and LinkedIn are innovating to help
organizations and professionals thrive in the era of AI.

Download the executive summaryDownload the full reportDownload the media kit

1 46% of survey respondents who use generative AI at work have used it for less
than six months.

2 Data represents intentional user Copilot query for meeting summarizations by
commercial customers in a rolling 28-day period ending in March 2024. It does
not include activity from Teams Intelligent Recap. Heaviest users represent the
top 5% of users by number of Copilot queries. Excludes EU usage and education
segment.

3 Data represents intentional email usage by commercial customers in a rolling
28-day period ending in March 2024. Excludes EU usage and education segment.

4 Collaboration patterns in Microsoft 365 in a rolling 28-day period ending in
March 2024, excluding weekends. Time spent is represented by intentional
activity in Microsoft 365 applications including Outlook, Teams, Word,
PowerPoint, Excel, and OneNote. Intentional actions include things like
attending a meeting, writing an email, analyzing data, and reviewing or editing
a document. Includes commercial users and excludes education segment. 

5 Research was conducted by Censuswide on behalf of LinkedIn among 1,013 US
working professionals between November 24 and December 12, 2023.

6 Unpublished data from LinkedIn’s Executive Confidence Index

7 Unpublished data from LinkedIn’s 2024 Workplace Learning Report

Methodology

Work Trend Index Survey

The Work Trend Index survey was conducted by an independent research firm,
Edelman Data & Intelligence, among 31,000 full-time employed or self-employed
knowledge workers across 31 markets between February 15, 2024 and March 28,
2024. This survey was 20 minutes in length and conducted online, in either the
English language or translated into a local language across markets. One
thousand full-time workers were surveyed in each market, and global results have
been aggregated across all responses to provide an average. In the US, an
additional sample of 2,800 full-time employed or self-employed knowledge workers
was collected across nine sub-regions/metros. 

Global markets surveyed include:
Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Colombia, Czech Republic, Finland,
France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico,
Netherlands, New Zealand, Philippines, Poland, Singapore, South Korea, Spain,
Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, United Kingdom, United States, and
Vietnam.

Sub-regions/Metros in the United States surveyed include:
Atlanta, Austin, Boston, DC Metro, Houston, New York City, North Carolina,
Pittsburgh, and the San Francisco Bay Area.

Audiences mentioned in the report are defined as follows:

 * Knowledge Workers: those who typically work at a desk (whether in an office
   or at home). This group includes those who are in person or working remotely
   in some capacity.

 * AI Power Users: knowledge workers who are at least familiar with generative
   AI, use it at work at least several times a week, and save more than 30
   minutes a day by using it.

 * Business Leaders/Business Decision Makers: knowledge workers in mid to upper
   job levels (i.e., SVP, VP, Sr. Director, General Manager, EVP, C-Suite,
   President, etc.) and have at least some decision-making influence related to
   hiring, budgeting, employee benefits, internal communications, operations,
   etc.

 * Employees/Non-Business Decision Makers: knowledge workers who are not in mid
   to upper job levels or have no influence on decision making related to
   hiring, budgeting, employee benefits, internal communications, operations,
   etc.

LinkedIn Economic Graph Research Institute

LinkedIn’s Economic Graph is a digital representation of the global workforce,
covering over 1 billion members, 67 million companies, and 134,000 schools.
LinkedIn’s Economic Graph Research Institute (EGRI) drives research focused on
answering members’ and leaders’ top questions about the economy and the labor
market, based on the Economic Graph data. EGRI’s metrics in this report
include*:

 * AI Aptitude Skills: These are standardized skills referring to the ability to
   use generative AI tools such as ChatGPT, Copilot, GitHub Copilot, etc.

 * Professionals adding AI Aptitude Skills: We compute the growth in the share
   of members adding AI Aptitude skills to their profiles, relative to the
   number of members adding any skill. 

 * Top Occupations adding AI Aptitude Skills: For every occupation in the
   LinkedIn taxonomy, we compute the growth in the share of members adding AI
   Aptitude skills to their profiles, relative to the number of members adding
   any skill.

 * Head of AI Roles: We identify members whose job titles include the keywords
   “AI,” “Artificial Intelligence,” or “Machine Learning” coupled with the
   keyword “Head,” or LinkedIn’s standardized seniority levels “Director,” “VP,”
   and “CXO.” We then build a time series of the number of companies with at
   least one member in Head of AI roles.

 * LinkedIn’s Jobs on the Rise (JOTR) that didn’t exist 20 years ago (US only):
   Every year, we publish LinkedIn’s JOTR, a ranked list of the fastest growing
   jobs (in terms of number of members holding that title) over the previous
   three years. Internships, volunteer positions, interim roles, or student
   roles are excluded. To compute the share of JOTR that did not exist 20 years
   ago, we compared the list to O*NET’s 2000 taxonomy by name or job
   description. O*NET is the US primary source for occupational information,
   consisting of a database developed under the sponsorship of the US Department
   of Labor. It contains hundreds of job definitions and is used extensively in
   academic research.

 * Projected Skills Change: We predict how skills will change over time by
   looking at how they changed in the past and estimating how they will change
   in the future via linear extrapolation. We also consider the impact of
   generative artificiaI intelligence (GAI) technology by imagining a scenario
   where skills that can be easily replicated by GAI become less important
   compared to other important skills.

* Unless otherwise specified, results reported are global, including the UK,
Germany, France, India, Singapore, Australia, and Brazil.

LinkedIn Executive Confidence Index

LinkedIn’s Executive Confidence Index (ECI) is an online survey taken every
quarter by ~5,000 LinkedIn members (at the VP level or above). The most recent
wave ran from March 4–19, 2024. Members are randomly sampled and must be opted
into research to participate. We analyze data in aggregate and will always
respect member privacy. Data is weighted by Seniority and Industry to ensure
fair representation of executives on the platform. The results represent the
world as seen through the lens of LinkedIn’s membership; variances between
LinkedIn’s membership and the overall market population are not accounted for.

LinkedIn Workplace Learning Report

The LinkedIn Learning 2024 Workplace Learning Report surveyed 1,636 L&D and HR
professionals with L&D responsibilities who have some influence on budget
decisions, and 1,063 learners. Surveyed geographies include: North America
(United States, Canada); South America (Brazil); Asia-Pacific (Australia, New
Zealand, India, Japan, Cambodia, Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Myanmar,
Philippines, Thailand, Hong Kong); and Europe (United Kingdom, Ireland, Belgium,
Netherlands, Luxembourg, Norway, Finland, Sweden, Iceland, Denmark, France,
Germany, Austria).

2024 Global Marketing Jobs Outlook Report

Insights were leveraged from Ipsos & LinkedIn research conducted in 2023 using a
sample of 1,577 senior-level B2B marketing leaders, including 377 CFOs, from
various industries in NAMER (US), EMEA (UK, DE, FR) , APAC (IN, AU, SG), and
LATAM (Brazil).

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