Recruiting and Hiring



AI Is Rewriting the Logic of Management

As artificial intelligence takes over routine reporting and analysis, managers finally have the opportunity to focus on what truly matters: leading people.
What is the true purpose of a manager?
Ask an executive, and they will likely say managers are essential for ensuring accountability and driving team performance. Ask an employee, and they will probably tell you that management is the primary path to career advancement. Both perspectives hold truth, but together, they highlight a pressing need to rethink how management roles actually operate.
Many organizations are bloated with managers, driven by a long-standing belief that more leaders equal better business performance. However, using management promotions as a retention strategy has overpopulated leadership ranks while diluting the quality of leadership itself. According to Gallup, only 22% of managers globally are actively engaged at work.
As AI creates the expectation and opportunity to oversee larger teams with fewer leaders, this organizational "addiction" to middle management is hitting a breaking point. While some companies will cling to the status quo, those that leverage AI to amplify human judgment can transcend traditional management models and capture real return on investment (ROI).

The High Cost of the Status Quo

Management roles undeniably serve practical purposes: frontline supervision, aligning team goals with business strategy, cross-departmental coordination, coaching, hiring, and fostering a positive team culture.
Yet, management has also become a social contract—an unspoken agreement that loyal employees will eventually be promoted. It remains the fastest track to greater influence and higher pay; on average, managers earn 33% more than individual contributors, a gap that widens to over 50% at senior levels.
In theory, this premium should fund leaders capable of sustaining high-performing teams. In reality, it often creates "accidental managers." For instance, 82% of managers in the U.K. lack formal leadership training. When individual contributors are promoted without adequate support, they frequently rely on gut instinct and surface-level metrics, making them prone to missing early signs of employee burnout or team dysfunction.
This risk is compounded by the inability of many organizations to reliably measure manager effectiveness. Connecting people data, HR metrics, and business outcomes is critical to identifying which leaders are truly driving performance, yet many companies still operate in the dark. Feeding a sprawling, data-blind management layer has become the norm. AI presents a vital opportunity to reject this tendency and rebuild management models around insight, not instinct.

A New Management Model for the AI Economy

Today, managers are often trapped in a frustrating game of corporate telephone. They waste time chasing and consolidating information for upper leadership, spending nearly 40% of their time on firefighting and administrative tasks, and a mere 13% on developing their people. Meanwhile, strategic guidance from the C-suite is often siloed in town halls, quarterly meetings, and static reports.
This inefficient reporting loop creates a costly disconnect between executive priorities and frontline actions. AI can close this information gap, but only if it is used to democratize data and strategic insights across the entire organization.
To truly improve strategic alignment, AI must be integrated into core management processes, not merely deployed as a personal productivity tool. Imagine a manager who, rather than asking a generic large language model (LLM) for vague advice, can query an enterprise AI system to understand how a specific decision aligns with company strategy. They can also ask how team-level signals, such as engagement and capacity, should inform their next steps.

The Power of a Unified AI System

A unified AI system, built on trusted workforce data, empowers both managers and C-suite leaders by enabling:
  • Data-Informed Decisions: Grounded in organizational workforce data, AI-powered insights allow managers to rapidly evolve as people developers. By harnessing real-time signals about team capacity and performance, they can make resourcing and prioritization decisions that map directly to both coaching needs and business goals. For newer or untrained managers, contextual AI offers the situational guidance a generic LLM cannot.
  • Better People Practices: Manager development can now happen in the flow of work. To pinpoint friction, a manager might ask an AI system to assess trends in their team’s Employee Net Promoter Score (eNPS) in the context of goal achievement. They can then track how engagement shifts after a change in workload or coaching approach. This dynamic feedback loop empowers managers to continuously refine their tactics.
  • Strategy-Execution Alignment: For executives, AI provides real-time visibility into how manager-level decisions align with organizational priorities. Instead of relying on delayed, secondhand reports, leaders can leverage unified people and business data to assess which managers are driving key outcomes and building thriving teams, and which may need additional support.
  • Manager Effectiveness Insights: As upper leadership uses connected workforce data to evaluate effectiveness, they can make more informed talent and promotion decisions. Organizations can deploy targeted development support for specific leaders and identify individual contributors who are primed to step into management based on proven impact, cultivating the next generation of effective leaders.

Rewriting the Rules of Leadership

Too often, companies invest in generalist LLMs and assume value will emerge organically through individual use. But unlocking ROI and reshaping management for the better begins by treating AI as an integrated system that supports leaner structures by enhancing decision-making at every level.
Organizations cling to legacy management structures because they are familiar, not because they are effective. AI can help break the addiction to an outdated approach that routinely promotes employees without assessing readiness, then expects them to lead without effective support or timely data.
Instead, a management model built for the speed of today’s business can leverage contextual AI to drive alignment across the organization. Insights based on connected workforce data empower managers to apply company strategy directly to day-to-day choices, while illuminating frontline execution for upper leadership.
Ultimately, AI is only one facet of this shift. It is an opportunity for a deeper rethinking of how we develop and promote leaders. Organizations that first define effective leadership and management potential, and then complement it with technology, will create the conditions for AI to deliver on its promise—elevating the potential of both current and future managers.