AI Makes Companies Faster, but at What Cost?
Artificial intelligence and asynchronous tools are driving unprecedented speed and efficiency. On paper, it’s all upside. But beneath the surface, a quiet trade-off is happening: leaders are gradually drifting away from their teams.
When we rely too heavily on AI-generated summaries and async updates, we make a dangerous mistake: we confuse visibility with connection.
Visibility shows you what is getting done.
Connection is formed in conversation, context, and the human moments where people feel seen, not just managed.
As a CEO of a company with over 100 people, I’ve learned that you cannot scale connection passively. You have to design for it just as intentionally as you design for growth.
1. Treat Connection as Infrastructure, Not an Afterthought
The biggest mistake leaders make is treating team connection as something to "fit in" when time allows. Spoiler alert: there is never time.
If connection isn't built into your operating model, it won’t happen.
Make it non-negotiable: Implement regular, structured 1-on-1s and cross-team conversations.
Bridge the gap: Intentionally create touchpoints beyond your direct reports to stay in touch with frontline realities.
The Goal: When these interactions are structured and recurring, they stop feeling like interruptions and become organizational infrastructure.
2. Shift from "Status Updates" to "Working Sessions."
In fast-moving environments, alignment drifts incredibly fast. Strong documentation and async text updates keep people informed, but they don't keep them aligned.
Without real-time collaboration, teams move quickly in slightly different directions, creating misunderstandings that require costly rework later.
The Fix: Swap passive status meetings for collaborative, real-time working sessions. Use this time to challenge assumptions and lock in decisions before small disconnects morph into major operational headaches.
3. Reduce the Distance Between Perception and Reality
When your primary communication filters through written text or AI transcripts, you grasp the "what," but you completely miss the "why" and the "how it feels."
Reducing the distance between what you think is happening and what is actually happening requires conscious effort.
Cross-functional conversations must be routine.
Leadership must remain visible across all tiers.
Human face-time must be protected—never let it be the first thing cut when schedules get busy.
AI is an incredible asset—it makes us faster, sharper, and more capable. But an algorithm cannot tell you when an employee is losing confidence, when a team is quietly stuck, or when a minor friction point is about to explode.
As a leader, your job isn't just to drive outcomes; it's to maintain the trust and clarity that make those outcomes possible. Staying close to your team is the job—not a task you get to after the "real" work is done.
If you wait for the perfect moment to connect, it will never arrive.
