
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.
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
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