SINGAPORE -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 14 July 2026 - A recent dipstick poll of 1,150 professionals,
managers, executives and technicians (PMETs) conducted by KPMG in
Singapore and the National Library Board (NLB) found that only 4 in 10
respondents expressed confidence in their ability to tell accurate
content apart from AI-generated misinformation.
Yet less than half of respondents said they would check the original
source of a statistic before forming an opinion, even if they are
reading an AI-generated summary in search engines. KPMG and NLB
conducted the poll from June to July 2026 to ascertain whether Singapore
professionals critically evaluate information in an environment where
AI-generated outputs are increasingly ubiquitous. The poll revealed a
gap between the demands of the AI era and the habits and skills
professionals have built thus far.
Against this landscape, KPMG in Singapore and NLB launched
Read to Lead: Building an AI-Ready Mind today. This is a year-long initiative to bring reading into the workplace. Officiated by
Ms Rahayu Mahzam, Minister of State, Ministry of Digital Development and Information,
the programme marks the start of a concerted push to embed focused
reading as a core professional capability across Singapore's workforce,
build discernment and critical thinking, and empower companies to
accelerate knowledge-building across their workforce.
As generative and agentic AI transform how individuals and
organisations access information, the ability to critically evaluate the
credibility of content will be increasingly important. It is imperative
that professionals engage in sustained and focused reading to build
this skill.
Melissa Tam, Chief Executive Officer, NLB, said,"Reading has
always been at the heart of what NLB does. The launch of Read to Lead
reflects our belief that focused reading strengthens our capability for
critical thinking. By reading consistently and reading widely, we learn
to ask better questions and are likely to be more discerning consumers
of AI generated outputs. Our partnership with KPMG brings this
conviction into the workplace and we hope this will be the first of
many. NLB looks forward to collaborating with more organisations across
Singapore to build a culture of reading, and through this, equip
Singapore's professionals with the skills they need to contribute
meaningfully to their organisations."
Lee Sze Yeng, Managing Partner, KPMG, said: "Singapore's
professionals are highly capable and deeply knowledgeable in their
fields — but in today's environment, reading fast and reading within
one's domain is no longer sufficient. Professionals who read widely
across disciplines will be significantly better at evaluating
information, including AI-generated content, even within their own
field. The ability to read laterally, connect ideas across domains, and
question what AI surfaces with genuine discernment is fast becoming the
capability that sets leaders apart. Read to Lead is our commitment to
building that at scale."
Read to Lead Programme is expected to benefit more than 2,000
PMETs and business leaders through expert-led talks, interactive
activities and resources aimed at building discernment as a professional
discipline.
Phase 1 — Knowledge Week: 14–16 July 2026
The programme launches with Knowledge Week, running from 14 to 16 July
at Asia Square, the KPMG Clubhouse and the National Library Building.
Activities are designed to help PMETs and businesses exercise sound
judgement while evaluating information sources, broaden their
perspectives beyond their professional domains, and engage with content
meaningfully rather than at surface level.
Knowledge Week features a digital library, an interactive quiz, and
panel discussions on three themes: critical reading as a professional
discipline; navigating misinformation and AI risks; and how
knowledge-building reinforces business resilience.
Phase 2 — Building AI-Ready Capabilities
Following Knowledge Week, KPMG and NLB will co-develop a practical
toolkit to advance PMETs' and businesses' knowledge of AI technologies
and strategies to counter misinformation and cyber risks. Expert-led
talks on AI literacy and trusted AI practices will be held across NLB
libraries, enabling individuals and businesses to engage with
information both critically and responsibly.
Phase 3 — Journey Paper (2027)
In 2027, KPMG and NLB will jointly publish a journey paper anchored in
insights gathered across the year-long programme and supported by
KPMG's global research. The publication is intended to sustain a
national conversation on critical reading beyond the programme.