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Doing Nothing About AI Is Also a Leadership Decision

Doing nothing about AI is not a neutral position. It is a leadership decision.

There are two realities leaders need to face.

First, AI is here to stay. This is no longer a question of hype cycles or experimental tools. AI is being embedded into software platforms, operational systems, research pipelines, regulatory processes, customer interfaces, and everyday workflows. We are not observing a trend. We are entering a new technological era that will shape how organizations create value and how people work.

Second, the window for passive observation is closing. There was a moment when waiting felt prudent — when it made sense to see how the technology evolved. That moment has largely passed. The organizations that are building literacy, experimenting responsibly, and shaping their internal capabilities today will not face the same starting line as those that hesitate for much longer. Catching up later will require significantly more cost, disruption, and cultural strain.

This is not about chasing trends. It is about adapting to a structural shift.

History shows that species that fail to adapt do not remain stable — they become extinct. The same is true for businesses. Those that fail to adapt do not survive; they fade into irrelevance. The real question is not whether organisations will endure this transition, but whether leaders are willing to evolve with it.

So why are so many leadership teams still stalled?

The answer is not ignorance. It is uncertainty.

Leaders do not know exactly where this transformation will lead. They cannot see a fully formed future state. They are expected to make decisions without clear precedents. And many fear investing in pilots, allocating resources, and mobilizing teams only to discover that the chosen direction was incomplete or insufficient.

This is precisely why AI is not just a technical challenge. It is an adaptive one.

Adaptive challenges are different from technical problems. Technical problems have known solutions. Expertise can be applied. Best practices can be copied.

Adaptive challenges do not offer that comfort.

With AI, no one fully knows what the world of work will look like in five years. No single leader can claim mastery. There is no definitive playbook to follow. The environment itself is evolving as we engage with it.

In adaptive moments, the instinct to wait is understandable. Admitting uncertainty feels destabilizing. Acknowledging limits of competence challenges identity and authority.

Yet adaptive leadership begins exactly there. It begins with the willingness to say: we do not have all the answers — and we must learn our way forward.

Three shifts become essential.

  1. The first is the courage to admit uncertainty openly. Pretending competence where none exists creates false confidence and poor decisions. Acknowledging that the organization is entering uncharted territory creates space for collective learning.
  2. The second is stakeholder engagement. Adaptive challenges cannot be solved in isolation. Leaders must identify who is affected by AI — business units, digital teams, HR, compliance, risk, customers — and bring them into a shared exploration. This is not about delegating responsibility downward or fragmenting it across silos. It is about convening the right voices to shape direction together.
  3. The third is disciplined experimentation. Experimentation does not mean reckless adoption. It means designing contained pilots with clear learning goals, defined guardrails, and transparent reflection. The purpose is not to prove success immediately. It is to generate insight about how AI interacts with the organization’s culture, decision-making processes, and value model. Through experimentation, organisations begin to understand what AI actually means for them — not in theory, but in practice.

Without these steps, paralysis takes hold. Teams hesitate because ownership is unclear. Functions assume others should lead. Informal experimentation happens quietly without alignment. The organization drifts rather than adapts.

Doing nothing feels cautious. In reality, it is a strategic stance — one that allows the external environment to shape the organization without deliberate leadership.

The deeper question is not whether AI will continue to advance. It will.

The real question is whether leaders are willing to evolve with it.

Adaptive moments do not reward certainty. They reward engagement.

Doing nothing is a decision.

The choice before leadership is whether that decision is intentional — or simply the byproduct of discomfort with uncertainty.

Author: Ana Babović, CEO & Founder FORWARD Consulting

WHY AI WILL SHIFT DECISION MAKING FROM THE C-SUITE TO THE FRONT LINE

Hardly a day goes by without the announcement of an incredible new frontier in Artificial Intelligence (AI). From fintech to edtech, what was once fantastically improbable is now a commercial reality. There is no question that big data and AI will bring about important advances in the realm of management, especially as it relates to being able to make better-informed decisions. But certain types of decisions — particularly those related to strategy, innovation and marketing — will likely continue to require a human being who can take a holistic view and make a qualitative judgment based on a personal consideration of the context and facts. In fact, to date, there is no AI technology that is fully able to factor in the emotional, human, and political context needed to automate decisions.

For example, consider the healthcare industry, where AI is having a huge impact. Even if AI can support a doctor in making a diagnosis and suggesting medical treatments for a cancer patient, only the doctor herself would be able to factor in the overall health condition and emotional context of the patient (and of the patient’s family) in order to decide whether to proceed with, say, surgery vs. chemotherapy. Most of what we do in healthcare is not simply about making a diagnosis, but working with patients to find an appropriate treatment that factors in a more holistic and empathic view of the patient’s circumstances.

AI technologies can provide managers and employees with accurate data and predictions at their fingertips to support and enable the right decisions in a timely way. But even if an AI system gives an employee super-powered intelligence, it won’t be enough to make a timely decision if the company’s internal bureaucracy requires time-consuming pre-authorization from senior managers before acting on the decision. To extract real value from AI, employees at all levels of the organization need to be empowered to make final decisions aided by AI, and act on them. In short, there needs to be a democratization of judgment-based decision-making power.

Much that’s been written about the decision-making impacts of big data and AI has tended to emphasize the importance of having centralized teams staffed with plenty of data scientists. This implies that companies with more data scientists have a better chance of generating business impact. My own experience as a consultant, supported by recent research, indicates a different view: firms that hire an army of data scientists do not always generate better bottom-line value. Rather, it is the democratization of access to AI tools and decision-making power among managers and employees which creates more tangible value.

Consider Internet platform companies such as Airbnb, where data is at the core of their business model. Airbnb believes that every employee should have access to its data platform to make informed decisions. This applies to all parts of the organization from marketing and business development to HR. For example, employees can monitor in real time how many of its hosts use the company’s professional photography services and in which location, with emerging trends, patterns, and predictions.

Data access is key, but it’s not enough. Employees also need to be given the skills to use and interpret data and tools. For Airbnb, it would not be possible to have a data scientist in every room, and the fast internationalization of the company makes the situation even more challenging.  Airbnb launched a Data University, which is split into three levels, with a curriculum of more than 30 modules. The goal is to build the knowledge and skillset for all employees to utilize and interpret data and tools. This enables employees to act swiftly on innovation opportunities. For example, product managers are learning to write their own SQL code and interpret their own experiments about whether to launch a new product feature in a certain city. The result: since launching the program in late 2016, more than 2,000 employees were trained, and the weekly active users (WAU) of the internal platform — a proxy of how “data informed” the organization is — rose from 30% to 45%.

Another case is Unilever. Orchestrated by the company’s newly created “Insights Engine”, the company introduced a number of AI-driven systems and tools that are accessible to all of its global marketers. The availability of real-time, frequent, data-driven consumer insights has generated even more need for distributed decision-making by the company’s marketers at all levels within the organization. One tool they use is People World, an AI platform able to mine thousands of consumer research documents and social media data. The platform is able to answer natural language questions that marketers may ask on a specific area. This addresses the classic problem “If only Unilever knew what Unilever knows,” helping to remove silos, increasing trust in “one consolidated source of truth,” and dramatically reducing the time needed to make informed decisions.

Over the last decade, the costs and time associated with organizing data and running analyses has dropped dramatically. But in many companies, AI use is still highly centralized. Corporate AI units often develop dashboards for senior executives which are used by them exclusively. AI democratization remains limited. But, by using AI to increase the effectiveness of the decisions employees are making, the need to control and centralize decisions essentially evaporates. Best practices show how democratization can bring about quicker and better distributed decisions, making companies more agile and responsive to market changes and opportunities.(This article was originally published in the Harvard Business Review, by John Coleman, that reserves all the rights. To read the original article please visit here.)
Now, imagine that the snow is the business environment, and the new car is your team. Whenever something happens in a business environment that you can’t control, and your team doesn’t adapt as quickly as you would like them to, you are considering if you have the team you need?

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