
AI Fluency Is the New Competitive Advantage. Here’s What That Means for Your Career.
How Anthropic’s AI Fluency Index, the 4D Framework, and the distinction between literacy and fluency are reshaping who gets AI governance jobs
There’s a conversation happening right now across hiring managers, workforce strategists, and AI companies that I don’t think enough people in the governance space are paying attention to. It’s not about which certification to get. It’s not about whether you need a technical degree. It’s about something much more fundamental: can you actually work with AI well?
Anthropic published the AI Fluency Index in February 2026, a data-driven study of nearly 10,000 real AI conversations that measures how effectively people collaborate with AI. Not just whether they use it.
Whether they use it well. For anyone building a career in AI governance, this research points to something worth paying attention to.
AI Literacy vs. AI Fluency: Why the Distinction Matters
These two terms get used interchangeably.
AI literacy is a foundational understanding of what AI is, how it works, and what it’s capable of. It means you can explain what a large language model does, understand the difference between generative AI and traditional software, and have an informed conversation about AI’s capabilities and limitations.
AI fluency builds on that foundation. It’s the ability to collaborate with AI effectively, efficiently, ethically, and safely. Think of the language analogy: literacy is being able to read and understand a language; fluency is being able to think, work, and communicate in it.
Literacy is the starting point. Fluency is where the real professional capability lives.
Where AI Fluency Came From
The concept didn’t originate inside a tech company. In 2023 and 2024, Professor Rick Dakan at Ringling College of Art and Design and Professor Joseph Feller at University College Cork were researching how AI tools were transforming creative and business work. They found that people needed more than literacy; they needed a framework for how to collaborate with AI in practice. So they developed the 4D AI Fluency Framework:
Description (how clearly you communicate with AI),
Delegation (knowing what to hand off and what to keep),
Discernment (critically evaluating AI outputs), and
Diligence (maintaining ethical and safety standards).
Anthropic saw this framework and recognized a shared vision. As Maggie Vo, Anthropic’s Head of Education, put it: they wanted to help people interact with AI effectively and responsibly; going beyond just “cool prompts.” So Anthropic partnered with Dakan and Feller to build free courses around the framework, releasing the core course in mid-2025, followed by versions for students, educators, and nonprofits; all under Creative Commons license.
Then in February 2026, they published the AI Fluency Index: the first large-scale measurement of how these fluency behaviors actually show up in real AI conversations. This wasn’t a marketing exercise. It was a research-backed initiative that started in the classroom and scaled into something the entire professional world can use.
Why This Framework Matters for Governance Professionals
What strikes me about the 4D framework is that none of these competencies are fundamentally technical.
They’re about communication, judgment, critical evaluation, and professional responsibility. These are capabilities that professionals in compliance, risk, audit, and governance already exercise daily; they just haven’t been applying them to AI collaboration yet.
You’re already good at being precise in your communication, at evaluating information critically, at maintaining ethical standards. AI fluency isn’t starting from scratch. It’s applying what you already know to a new tool.
What the Data Shows
The AI Fluency Index analyzed 9,830 multi-turn conversations and measured 11 observable fluency behaviors. Two findings stand out.
First, iteration is the strongest predictor of AI fluency. 86 percent of conversations in their sample showed iteration and refinement. Users who iterated were 5.6 times more likely to question AI’s reasoning and 4 times more likely to identify missing context.
The most effective AI users are staying in the conversation, pushing back, and refining. That’s a thinking skill; and it’s one that governance and compliance professionals should practice every day.
Second, when AI produces polished-looking outputs, people become less critical. Users in artifact-creation conversations were less likely to question reasoning, check facts, or identify gaps. The ability to evaluate AI outputs becomes more valuable.
This is a governance skill.
Discernment in Practice
In my video (see below), I demonstrated what Discernment looks like with a real example: prompting AI to draft an AI risk assessment for a healthcare company deploying a clinical decision support tool. The first output looked polished and professional; with appropriate headers. Most people would stop there.
But a fluent user asks:
What regulatory frameworks are you basing this on?
What’s missing from this assessment?
Walk me through your reasoning on model bias.
The difference between the first output and the refined version after those three questions was significant. The gap is where AI fluency lives; and it’s where governance professionals have an edge they might not even realize.
How to Start Building AI Fluency
The actionable part is straightforward. Take Anthropic’s free AI Fluency courses at anthropic.com/learn. Practice iteration and critical evaluation in every AI interaction; stay in the conversation, push back, set the terms of the collaboration.
Build sample work products that demonstrate AI-augmented capability (an AI-assisted risk assessment that you then critically refined is far more compelling than a certification badge).
Study governance frameworks with AI assistance, building both domain knowledge and fluency simultaneously.
And write publicly about your AI-augmented work, because demonstrated capability is the signal the market is looking for.
Where I Land on This
AI literacy is the foundation. AI fluency is what you build on top.
AI Fluency is a skill you can build today, with tools that are free, by doing work that demonstrates what you’re capable of. The question now is whether you’re fluent enough. If you come from compliance, risk, audit, or governance, the 4D framework maps directly to skills you already have. Now it’s about applying them to AI and showing the world you can.
Want to Build Your AI Governance Foundation?
My free 10-day challenge covers the core frameworks and skills.
I also run a coaching program for professionals making this career transition. https://obiogbanufe.com/contact
Subscribe for more: youtube.com/@obiogbanufe
