TLDR
- FedEx launched a company-wide AI literacy program in December 2025, covering over 400,000 employees globally
- The program was built in partnership with Accenture and runs through its LearnVantage platform
- Training is personalized and role-based, designed to evolve as AI technology changes
- Every C-suite executive spent two days in Silicon Valley vetting AI partners before the program launched
- FDX stock is up close to 50% over the past year, with its latest earnings meeting investor approval
FedEx has rolled out an AI training program to its entire global workforce of more than 400,000 people. The initiative, launched in December 2025, is built in partnership with tech consulting firm Accenture and runs through its LearnVantage platform.
The program is designed to be role-based and personalized, meaning a delivery driver gets different training than a data scientist or a customs clearance worker. That’s a deliberate choice — FedEx wants every layer of the business covered, not just the tech teams.
What sets this apart from typical corporate training is the level of buy-in from the top. Before the program launched, every C-suite executive at FedEx took two full days away from the office and flew to Silicon Valley. The goal was to meet with AI companies in a speed-dating format to find the best fit.
“I have never seen an organization’s full C-suite take off for a two-day to just learn,” said Vishal Talwar, FedEx’s executive vice president and chief data and information officer.
FDX stock has climbed close to 50% over the past year, with its most recent earnings report drawing a positive response from investors. The stock was trading up around 0.87% at the time of reporting.
What the Training Actually Looks Like
Employees can complete sessions during work hours, back-office hours, or on their own time. Talwar described it as a “living curriculum” that refreshes monthly and quarterly, rather than a one-time rollout.
Beyond individual modules, FedEx is encouraging employees to form communities of practice. Data scientists, for example, have set up their own group to share ideas and identify new use cases. Hackathons are also part of the mix.
The company is tracking what it calls AIQ — an AI quotient — as workers complete training. Talwar was careful to frame it as measuring progress, not just outcomes.
“We are measuring progress around AI, not necessarily just success,” he said.
Workforce Pressures in the Background
The push to upskill comes against a challenging backdrop. FedEx has closed facilities and cut jobs in locations from Kansas to France as part of broader cost-cutting efforts. Rival UPS announced 30,000 layoffs recently, on top of 48,000 in 2025.
FedEx leadership is framing AI not as a replacement for workers, but as a tool to make them more capable. One early sign it’s working: frontline workers are now seeking corporate roles at a higher rate since the training began.
Only 28% of organizations have embedded continuous AI learning, according to Accenture’s 2026 Pulse of Change report. FedEx is positioning itself in that smaller group with a program that has no set end date.
FedEx’s most recent earnings report was released this week and was met with investor approval. The company’s latest AI product additions — including advanced digital tracking and returns capabilities for shippers — were announced in early February.







