Whether we like it or not, generative AI is challenging almost every aspect of how we do business. But are we approaching that challenge in the best way? A common misconception is to focus purely on the technology – when in truth we should be framing this as a leadership problem: the real constraint is an organisation’s ability to adapt, learn and transform. This becomes ever more important as people grapple with fear and uncertainty about the future.
As part of London Business School’s AI Masterclass, in partnership with the Financial Times, Professor Herminia Ibarra, Charles Handy Chair in Organisational Behaviour, sat down with Professor Michael Jacobides, Sir Donald Gordon Professor of Entrepreneurship and Innovation, to explore how leaders should respond – redefining their own roles, while supporting their teams through a period of profound change.
“The issue isn’t the technology itself,” Herminia explains, “it’s humans’ ability to use it.” That may sound familiar. We have been here before, she argues, through waves of digital transformation and earlier technological shifts. But AI – and the pace of change it brings – raises the stakes. “It demands a systemic look at your value proposition and how you get it done,” she says. “As a leader, your job is to enhance the capacity of your organisation to be a learning system – to adapt and transform.”
That shift also means engaging people at a time when they’re extremely anxious about their job, status, power and security, she explains. In order to do that, leaders have to take a look in the mirror, to find within themselves those more human qualities that they may not have been hired or rewarded for in the past.
Understand the landscape
First, leaders must be outward, as well as inward facing. “Get out of the house,” Herminia advises. “Maintain your external networks, talk to people, benchmark.” Organisations are often insular, relying too heavily on internal perspectives. But in a fast-moving space like AI, understanding what’s hype, what’s real, and where value is actually being created requires looking beyond your immediate environment.