You Know AI Could Make You a Better Leader. So Why Aren't You Using It?
Walk into any leadership offsite right now, and you'll hear the same conversation. Everyone sees the potential. Everyone agrees something needs to change. And almost nobody is actually doing it well yet.
That gap — between knowing and leading — is exactly where most executives are stuck.
Here's the thing: it's not a technology problem. It's an information-flow problem.
You surface a critical insight in one meeting, and it's completely gone by the next. Context bleeds between conversations. Decisions that should take hours get reconstructed from memory and pushed back by days. You're not drowning from a shortage of intelligence. You're drowning because the system around you was never designed to protect it.
What AI Actually Does (And Doesn't Do)
There's a lot of noise in the AI conversation right now, and most of it misses the point.
AI doesn't improve your judgment by replacing it. It improves your judgment by giving it room to breathe.
Here's what machines genuinely do well: they capture what happened. They synthesize across weeks or months of information. They compress what used to be a two-week analysis cycle into an afternoon. That's real, and it matters.
But the things that actually determine whether a leader succeeds — weighing trade-offs, applying real-world context, making the call when the data is ambiguous — those still belong to you. Automation isn't your competitive edge. Your judgment under pressure is.
The moment you forget that distinction, you've already lost the plot.
The Hesitation Tax
So if the tools are there and the potential is clear, why aren't more leaders moving?
Because hesitation has a comfortable disguise. It looks like diligence.
You worry about choosing the wrong tool. You wait for a strategy that feels airtight before you start. You delegate AI adoption to someone else and quietly hope for the best. Meanwhile, the window narrows.
Here's the harder truth: you won't learn to lead with AI by reading about it. You won't figure it out from the sidelines of your own organization. The advantage is going to the leaders who started small, got their hands dirty, and built from what they learned — not from what they planned.
Where to Actually Start
You don't need to become an AI expert. You don't need a strategy deck or a task force. You need one honest look at your week.
Where do decisions feel slower than they should? Which meeting has you reconstructing the same context from scratch, again? Which analysis cycle is eating time it shouldn't?
Start there. Pick one tool. Test it. See what shifts.
Barry O'Reilly, co-founder and Chief Innovation Officer at Nobody Studios — the firm that set the audacious goal of launching 100 AI companies in five years — makes exactly this case in his new book Artificial Organizations. His framework is deliberately practical: think big, start small, build from real experience rather than theoretical buy-in. His personal recommendation for eliminating wasted meeting time? Start with Otter.AI and see how quickly the ROI becomes obvious.
The point isn't perfection. It's motion.
The Leaders Who Will Win
The executives who thrive over the next few years won't be the ones who understood AI best in theory. They'll be the ones who used it — early, imperfectly, and often enough to actually get good.
That starts with one decision: go first.
Not after the strategy is airtight. Not after someone else proves it works. Now, with the messy, uncertain, good-enough version of a plan you already have.
The gap between knowing and leading closes only one way. You close it.
