Leadership Insights
Why Traditional Management Is Struggling in the AI Era
A manager I recently spoke with said something that perfectly captures what is happening inside many organizations right now:
“Every 30 minutes, someone creates something I have to look at.”
That sentence highlights a major shift that many managers are starting to feel.
For years, management systems were built around a simple assumption:
Execution takes time.
Managers could:
- assign work
- wait several days
- review progress later
- run weekly check-ins
- manage through slower review cycles
But AI is fundamentally changing that rhythm.
Today, employees can:
- create faster
- prototype faster
- analyze faster
- write faster
- ship faster
And increasingly, traditional management structures are struggling to keep up.
AI Is Accelerating Execution
AI tools dramatically increase the speed of knowledge work.
Tasks that previously took:
- hours
- days
- sometimes weeks
can now be completed much faster.
This creates enormous opportunity for organizations. Teams can explore more ideas, move faster, and execute at a much higher velocity.
But it also creates a new problem:
Management itself becomes the bottleneck.
One manager described discussing a project in a one-on-one meeting only to discover it had already been built and launched the next day.
The old management cadence starts breaking down.
Weekly review cycles suddenly feel too slow.
Approval layers slow execution.
Managers struggle to review the increasing volume of output.
The challenge is no longer:
“Can teams execute?”
The challenge becomes:
“Can management keep up with the speed of execution?”
Traditional Management Was Built for a Slower Environment
A large part of traditional management evolved around:
- coordination
- information flow
- oversight
- reporting
- status tracking
- administrative alignment
Managers created value by helping organizations handle complexity manually.
That made sense when:
- information moved slowly
- work took longer
- visibility was limited
- coordination was expensive
But AI changes many of those assumptions.
AI can now assist with:
- summaries
- reporting
- documentation
- task tracking
- drafting communication
- information retrieval
- analysis
As coordination overhead decreases, organizations naturally begin questioning slower management structures and workflows.
The Shift from Coordination to Enablement
This does not mean managers become unnecessary.
But it does mean the role starts shifting.
Instead of spending most of their energy:
- gathering updates
- reviewing every detail
- manually coordinating work
- tracking progress
Managers increasingly create value through:
- setting direction
- improving workflows
- removing bottlenecks
- accelerating decisions
- coaching people
- aligning teams
- enabling better execution
In other words, the manager moves from:
coordinating work
to:
enabling higher-performance execution.
Why the Player-Coach Model Is Emerging
As AI accelerates execution, managers can no longer remain completely disconnected from:
- workflows
- operational realities
- execution challenges
- how work actually gets done
Things move too quickly.
A manager who stays too far away from operational reality risks:
- slowing teams down
- missing bottlenecks
- creating unnecessary approval layers
- losing visibility into how AI changes workflows
This is why we increasingly see the rise of the player-coach manager.
Not a manager who does all the work personally.
But a manager who:
- understands the operational environment
- stays close enough to execution to guide intelligently
- understands workflows
- helps teams work more effectively
- combines leadership with operational understanding
Leadership Becomes More Important, Not Less
One of the biggest misconceptions about AI is that it reduces the importance of leadership.
In reality, the opposite may happen.
As execution speeds increase:
- pressure increases
- complexity increases
- communication becomes more compressed
- burnout risks increase
- organizational change accelerates
That makes:
- coaching
- communication
- trust
- alignment
- emotional intelligence
- change leadership
even more important.
AI may reduce parts of administrative management.
But it increases the importance of human leadership.
The Future Manager Is Different
The managers who thrive in AI-enabled organizations will likely not be the ones who:
- control every detail
- review every action
- manually coordinate every workflow
Instead, successful managers will increasingly:
- guide direction
- improve systems
- remove friction
- accelerate execution
- stay operationally informed
- lead teams through rapid change
The role evolves from:
administrator
to:
enabler, accelerator, and operational leader.
And I believe we are only at the beginning of that transition.