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In 2004 I found myself running a major news organization during the Orange Revolution in Ukraine. It was one of those moments when the universe opens up, reveals a bit of itself and you realize the world doesn’t work the way you thought it did. What struck me at the time was that nobody with any conventional form of power had any ability to shape events at all.
One of the myths that is constantly repeated is that change needs to start at the top. Clearly that is not true. It wasn’t true of the Color Revolutions that spread across Eastern Europe. Nor was it true of social movements like the fight for LGBT rights. Despite what you may have heard, it doesn’t hold true for organizations either.
What is true is that if you are going to bring about genuine change you need to influence institutions and that means you need, at some point, to involve senior leaders, but it rarely starts with them. The myth that change has to start at the top is a copout — a reason to do nothing when you can do something. Make no mistake. Change can come from anywhere.
Weaving Webs of Influence
Movements, as the name implies, are kinetic. They start somewhere and they end up somewhere else. That’s one reason why why so many successful change efforts become misunderstood. People look back at an event like the 1963 March on Washington and think that’s what made the civil rights movement successful. Nothing could be further from the truth. That wasn’t what built the movement, it was part of the end game.
Consider that the first “March on Washington,” the Woman Suffrage Procession of 1913, was a disaster. None of the others since 1963 did much either. The civil rights march came after nearly a decade of boycotts, sit-ins, Freedom Rides and other tactics that built the movement before it finally found its moment. Still, it’s the moment that people remember.
In much the same way, whenever we see a successful transformation we look to the actions of leaders. We see a CEO who gave a speech, a marketer who came up with a big product idea or an engineer who took a project in a new direction. These events are real, but they rarely, if ever, appear out of nowhere. They are products of webs of influence.
When we look more closely, we inevitably find that the CEO was inspired to give the pivotal speech from a conversation he had with his daughter. The marketer got the initial idea for the campaign from a junior team member. Or the engineer changed the direction of the project after a fateful encounter he had in the cafeteria.
Our decisions are the product of complex systems. Anything can start anywhere. Don’t let anyone tell you differently.
Going to Where the Energy Is
Transformations, in retrospect, often seem inevitable, even obvious. Yet they don’t start out that way. The truth is that it is small groups, loosely connected, but united by a common purpose that drives transformation. So the first thing you want to do is identify your apostles — people who are already excited about the possibilities for change.
For example, in his efforts to reform the Pentagon, Colonel John Boyd began every initiative by briefing a group of collaborators he called the “Acolytes,” who would help hone and sharpen the ideas. He then moved on to congressional staffers, elected officials and the media. By the time general officers were aware of what he was doing, he had too much support to ignore.
In a similar vein, a massive effort to implement lean manufacturing methods at Wyeth Pharmaceuticals began with one team at one factory, but grew to encompass 17,000 employees across 25 sites worldwide and cut manufacturing costs by 25%. The campaign that overthrew Serbian dictator Slobodan Milošević started with just 5 kids in a coffee shop.
One advantage to starting small is that you can identify your apostles informally, even through casual conversations. In skills-based transformations, change leaders often start with workshops and see who seems enthusiastic or comes up after the session. Your apostles don’t need to have senior positions or special skills, they just have to be passionate.
There’s something about human nature that, when we’re passionate about an idea, makes us want to go convince the skeptics. Don’t do that. Start with people who want your idea to succeed. If you feel the urge to convince or persuade, that’s a sign that you either have the wrong idea or the wrong people.
“You have to go where the energy is,” John Gadsby, who built a movement for process improvement inside Procter & Gamble that has grown to encompass 60,000 employees, told me. “We’ll choose energy and excitement and enthusiasm over the right position, or the person at the right leadership level, or the person whose job it is supposed to be to do that.”
Mobilizing People To Influence Institutions
In the early 1990s, writer and activist Jeffrey Ballinger published a series of investigations about Nike’s use of sweatshops in Asia. People were shocked by the horrible conditions that workers — many of them children — were subjected to. In most cases, the owners lived outside the countries where the factories were located and had little contact with their employees.
At first, Nike’s CEO, Phil Knight, was defiant. “I often reacted with self-righteousness, petulance, anger. On some level I knew my reaction was toxic, counterproductive, but I couldn’t stop myself,” he would later write in his memoir, Shoe Dog. He pointed out that his company didn’t own the factories, that he’d worked with the owners to improve conditions and that the stories, as gruesome as they were, were exceptions.
The simple truth is that change rarely, if ever, starts at the top because it is people with power that create the status quo. They are attached to what they’ve built and take pride in their accomplishments, just like the rest of us. That’s why, to bring about genuine change — change that lasts — you need to mobilize people to influence institutions (or those, like Knight, who yield institutional power).
Eventually, that’s what happened at Nike. The protests took their toll. “We had to admit,” Knight remembered, “We could do better.” Going beyond its own factories, the company established the Fair Trade Labor Association and published a comprehensive report of its own factories. Today, the company’s track record may not be perfect, but it’s become more a part of the solution than a part of the problem.
Change Is Never Top-Down Or Bottom-Up
At a pivotal moment during the height of the civil rights movement, Robert Kennedy, Attorney General of the United States and brother to the President, would turn to the activist John Lewis and say, “’John, the people, the young people of the SNCC, have educated me. You have changed me. Now I understand.”
Lewis, just a young kid in his twenties at the time, was himself the product of webs of influence. He was shaped by mentors like Jim Lawson and Keller Miller Smith, as well as by peers such as Diane Nash, Bernard Lafayette and James Bevel. They, in turn, influenced others to get out, protest and shape the minds of people like Robert Kennedy.
As I explain in Cascades, transformation isn’t top-down or bottom-up, but happens from side-to-side. You can find the entire spectrum — from active support to active resistance — at every level. The answer doesn’t lie in any specific strategy or initiative, but in how people are able to internalize the need for change and transfer ideas through social bonds.
Change never happens all at once and can’t simply be willed into existence. The best way to do that is to empower those who already believe in change to bring in those around them. That’s what’s key to successful transformations. A leader’s role is not to plan and direct action, but to inspire and empower belief.
— Article courtesy of the Digital Tonto blog
— Image credit: Unsplash
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Something fundamental has changed in how products are created.
Artificial intelligence can now generate working software in minutes. Designers can move from an idea to a functional prototype without waiting for engineering. Engineers can generate interface concepts, user flows, and even early product ideas with a few well-crafted prompts.
The traditional product development cycle — design, then build, then test — is collapsing into something faster, messier, and far more fluid.
In the past, the biggest constraint in innovation was the cost and time required to build something. Today, AI dramatically reduces that barrier. Entire features, experiments, and even applications can be created almost instantly.
Which raises an uncomfortable question that many product leaders, designers, and engineers are quietly asking:
If we can ship almost immediately, do we still need design thinking?
At first glance, the answer might seem obvious. Design thinking was created to help teams understand people, define the right problems, and avoid building the wrong solutions. Those goals have not disappeared.
But when the cost of building approaches zero, the role of design inevitably changes. The traditional pacing of discovery, ideation, prototyping, and testing begins to compress. The boundaries between designer and engineer begin to blur.
And as those boundaries dissolve, the question is no longer simply whether design thinking still matters.
The deeper question is whether the discipline itself must evolve to survive in a world where almost anyone can turn an idea into working software.
II. Design Thinking Was Built for a World of Scarcity
To understand how artificial intelligence is reshaping product creation, it helps to remember the environment in which design thinking originally emerged.
Design thinking did not appear because organizations suddenly discovered empathy or creativity. It emerged because building things was expensive, slow, and risky. Every product decision carried significant cost, and mistakes could take months or years to correct.
In that world, organizations needed a structured way to reduce uncertainty before committing engineering resources. Design thinking provided that structure.
Its now-famous stages helped teams move deliberately from understanding people to building solutions:
Empathize — deeply understand the people you are designing for.
Define — frame the real problem worth solving.
Ideate — generate a wide range of possible solutions.
Prototype — create rough representations of potential ideas.
Test — validate whether those ideas actually work for people.
The goal was simple: avoid spending months building something no one actually needed.
Design thinking slowed teams down in the right places so they could move faster later. It created space for exploration before the heavy machinery of engineering was set in motion.
But this entire framework assumed one critical constraint:
Building was the most expensive part of innovation.
Prototypes were often static mockups. Experiments required engineering time. Even small product changes could take weeks or months to ship.
In other words, design thinking was optimized for a world where the biggest risk was building the wrong thing.
Today, AI is rapidly changing that assumption. When working software can be generated in minutes rather than months, the bottleneck shifts — and the role of design must evolve with it.
III. AI Has Flipped the Innovation Constraint
For most of the history of digital product development, the limiting factor in innovation was the ability to build. Even the best ideas had to wait in line for scarce engineering resources, long development cycles, and complex release processes.
Artificial intelligence is rapidly dismantling that constraint.
Today, AI tools can generate functional code, working interfaces, and interactive prototypes in minutes. What once required a team of specialists and weeks of effort can often be produced by a single individual in an afternoon.
Designers can now:
Create interactive prototypes that behave like real products
Generate front-end code directly from design concepts
Rapidly explore multiple product directions
Engineers can now:
Generate user interfaces and layouts
Experiment with product concepts before committing to full builds
Quickly iterate on product experiences
The barrier between idea and implementation is shrinking dramatically.
As a result, the core constraint in innovation is no longer the ability to build something. The new constraint is the ability to decide what should actually be built.
When creation becomes cheap, judgment becomes the scarce resource.
Organizations can now generate more ideas, features, and experiments than they have the capacity to evaluate thoughtfully. The risk is no longer simply building the wrong thing slowly.
The risk is building thousands of things quickly without enough clarity about which ones actually matter.
This shift fundamentally changes the role of design. Instead of primarily helping teams avoid costly mistakes in development, design increasingly becomes the discipline that helps organizations navigate overwhelming possibility.
IV. The Blurring of Roles: Designers Reach Forward, Engineers Reach Back
One of the most profound effects of AI in product development is the erosion of traditional professional boundaries.
For decades, the technology industry operated with relatively clear separations of responsibility. Designers focused on user needs, interaction models, and visual systems. Engineers translated those designs into working software. Product managers coordinated priorities and timelines between the two.
That structure was largely a reflection of technical limitations. Designing and building required specialized tools, knowledge, and workflows that made cross-disciplinary work difficult.
AI is rapidly dissolving those barriers.
Designers can now reach forward into the domain that once belonged exclusively to engineering. With AI-assisted tools, they can generate working interfaces, produce front-end code, and simulate complex user interactions without waiting for implementation.
At the same time, engineers can reach backward into design. AI systems can help them generate layouts, propose interface structures, and explore experience flows that once required specialized design expertise.
The result is a new kind of creative overlap:
Designers who can prototype in code
Engineers who can explore experience design
Product creators who move fluidly between disciplines
The traditional model of work moving through a linear chain — research to design to engineering — begins to give way to a far more integrated creative process.
The future product creator is not defined by a job title, but by the ability to move fluidly between understanding problems and building solutions.
This does not mean design expertise or engineering skill become less important. If anything, the opposite is true. As tools make it easier for everyone to participate in creation, the depth of real craft becomes more visible and more valuable.
But it does mean the rigid boundaries between “designer” and “builder” are beginning to dissolve, creating a new generation of hybrid creators who can move seamlessly between imagining, designing, and shipping experiences.
V. The Death of the Handoff
For decades, most product development operated like a relay race. Work moved from one team to the next through a series of formal handoffs.
Researchers gathered insights and passed them to designers. Designers created wireframes and mockups that were handed to engineering. Engineers translated those designs into working software and eventually passed the finished product to testing and operations.
Each transition introduced delays, misinterpretations, and loss of context. The original understanding of the problem often became diluted as it traveled through the system.
Artificial intelligence is accelerating the collapse of this model.
When individuals can move rapidly from idea to prototype to functional product, the need for rigid handoffs begins to disappear. A single person can now:
Explore a user problem
Design a potential solution
Generate working code
Launch an experiment
Instead of waiting for work to pass from one discipline to another, creators can stay connected to the entire lifecycle of an idea.
The distance between insight and implementation is shrinking.
This shift has profound implications for how innovation happens inside organizations. Instead of large teams coordinating complex handoffs, smaller groups — or even individuals — can rapidly test ideas and learn from real-world feedback.
Product development begins to look less like an industrial assembly line and more like a creative studio, where ideas are explored, built, and refined continuously.
The most effective teams in this environment will not simply move faster. They will maintain ownership of ideas from the moment a problem is discovered all the way through to the moment a solution is experienced by real people.
VI. What AI Actually Kills
Artificial intelligence is not killing design thinking.
What it is killing are many of the habits that organizations adopted in the name of design thinking but that were never truly about understanding people or solving meaningful problems.
For years, some teams have mistaken the appearance of innovation for the practice of it. Workshops replaced experiments. Sticky notes replaced decisions. Slide decks replaced prototypes.
When building was slow and expensive, these behaviors were often tolerated because teams needed time to align before committing resources. But in a world where working solutions can be generated almost instantly, those habits quickly become friction.
AI removes the excuses that allowed these patterns to persist.
Process Theater
Innovation workshops that generate energy but not outcomes become difficult to justify when teams can build and test ideas immediately.
Endless Ideation
Brainstorming sessions that produce dozens of ideas without committing to experiments lose their value when ideas can be rapidly turned into prototypes and evaluated in the real world.
Documentation Instead of Exploration
Detailed reports, long strategy decks, and static artifacts once helped communicate ideas across teams. But when AI allows concepts to be expressed through working experiences, documentation becomes less important than experimentation.
Safe Innovation
Perhaps most importantly, AI challenges organizations that use process as a shield against risk. When it becomes easy to test bold ideas quickly and cheaply, avoiding experimentation becomes a choice rather than a necessity.
AI doesn’t eliminate design thinking. It eliminates the distance between thinking and doing.
The organizations that thrive in this environment will not be the ones with the most polished innovation processes. They will be the ones that are most willing to replace discussion with discovery and ideas with experiments.
VII. The New Role of Design: Decision Velocity
When the cost of building drops dramatically, the nature of competitive advantage changes.
In the past, organizations succeeded by efficiently transforming ideas into products. Engineering capacity, technical expertise, and operational discipline were often the primary constraints.
But when AI can generate working software, prototypes, and experiments almost instantly, the challenge is no longer how quickly something can be built.
The challenge becomes how quickly and wisely teams can decide what is actually worth building.
In an AI-driven world, innovation speed is no longer about development velocity — it is about decision velocity.
This is where the role of design evolves.
Design shifts from primarily producing artifacts — wireframes, mockups, and prototypes — to guiding the choices that shape meaningful innovation.
Designers increasingly become the people who help teams:
Frame the right problems to solve
Clarify human needs and motivations
Prioritize which ideas deserve experimentation
Interpret signals from real-world user behavior
In other words, design becomes less about shaping the interface of a product and more about shaping the direction of learning.
When organizations can generate thousands of potential solutions, the real value lies in identifying the small number that actually create meaningful value for people.
Designers, at their best, help organizations navigate that complexity. They connect technology to human context, helping teams avoid the trap of building faster without thinking better.
In the AI era, design is not slowing innovation down. It is helping organizations move quickly without losing their sense of where they should be going.
VIII. From Design Thinking to Design Doing
As artificial intelligence compresses the distance between idea and implementation, the nature of design practice begins to change. The emphasis shifts away from structured stages and toward continuous experimentation.
Traditional design thinking frameworks helped teams organize their thinking before committing to build. But in an AI-enabled environment, building itself becomes part of the thinking process.
Instead of long cycles of analysis followed by development, teams can now explore ideas directly through working prototypes and rapid experiments.
The most effective teams no longer separate thinking from building. They think by building.
This shift marks a move from design thinking to what might be called design doing.
In this model, learning happens through fast cycles of creation, feedback, and refinement. Ideas are not debated endlessly in workshops or captured in lengthy documents. They are explored through tangible experiences that can be observed, tested, and improved.
The practical differences begin to look like this:
Traditional Model
AI-Enabled Model
Workshops and brainstorming sessions
Rapid experiments and live prototypes
Personas and research summaries
Behavioral data and real-world signals
Concept mockups
Functional prototypes
Long planning cycles
Continuous learning loops
None of this diminishes the importance of understanding people. If anything, the need for deep human insight becomes even more important as the pace of experimentation accelerates.
What changes is how that understanding is expressed. Instead of existing primarily as documents or presentations, insight becomes embedded directly into the experiences teams create and test.
In an AI-native organization, design is no longer a phase that happens before development begins. It becomes an ongoing activity woven directly into the act of building and learning.
IX. Human Trust Becomes the New Design Material
As artificial intelligence accelerates the speed of building, the most important design challenges begin to shift away from usability and toward something deeper: trust.
When products can be created, modified, and deployed almost instantly, the risk is not simply poor interface design. The risk is creating experiences that feel disconnected from human values, human context, and human expectations.
AI makes it easier than ever to generate functionality. But it does not automatically ensure that what is generated is responsible, understandable, or aligned with the needs of the people who will use it.
In an AI-driven world, the most important design material is no longer pixels or screens — it is human trust.
This raises a new set of responsibilities for designers, engineers, and product leaders alike.
Teams must think carefully about questions such as:
Do people understand what the system is doing?
Are decisions being made transparently?
Does the experience respect human autonomy?
Does the technology reinforce or erode confidence?
As AI systems become more powerful, the danger is not just that they might fail. The danger is that they might succeed in ways that quietly undermine the relationship between organizations and the people they serve.
Design therefore becomes a critical safeguard. It ensures that rapid technological capability does not outpace thoughtful consideration of human consequences.
In this sense, the role of design expands beyond shaping products. It becomes the discipline that ensures technology remains grounded in human meaning, responsibility, and trust.
X. The Future: Designers Who Ship, Engineers Who Empathize
As AI blurs the traditional boundaries between design and engineering, the most valuable creators in the future will be those who can move fluidly between imagining, designing, and building.
Designers will need to ship working products, not just static prototypes. Engineers will need to empathize deeply with users, understanding problems and shaping experiences that align with human needs.
The new hybrid product creator embodies both curiosity and capability, bridging the gap between thinking and doing. They are able to:
Rapidly translate insights into working solutions
Experiment and learn from real-world user behavior
Balance technical feasibility with human desirability
Maintain alignment between strategy, design, and execution
In this new landscape, design thinking does not disappear — it evolves. AI removes many of the barriers that previously prevented designers and engineers from collaborating fully and iterating quickly.
The organizations that succeed will be those where everyone has the ability to both understand humans and act on that understanding at the speed of AI.
The future belongs to hybrid creators who can navigate ambiguity, make fast decisions, and embed human trust into every experiment. In such a world, innovation is no longer the domain of specialists — it is the responsibility of anyone capable of connecting insight with action.
XI. The Real Question Leaders Should Be Asking
The debate is often framed as a dramatic question: “Has AI killed design thinking?” But this framing misses the deeper challenge facing organizations today.
The real question is not whether design thinking survives — it is whether organizations are prepared to operate in a world where anyone can turn ideas into working products almost instantly.
In this AI-accelerated environment, success depends less on the speed of coding or the elegance of design frameworks. It depends on human judgment, understanding, and alignment.
Leaders must ask themselves:
Do our teams know what problems are truly worth solving?
Can we prioritize experiments that create real human value?
Are we embedding human trust and ethical consideration into everything we build?
Are our designers and engineers equipped to operate across traditional boundaries?
In this new era, the organizations that thrive will not be the ones with the fastest developers or the slickest design processes.
They will be the organizations that can rapidly identify meaningful opportunities, make thoughtful decisions, and maintain human-centered principles while moving at the speed of AI.
Innovation will no longer belong to the people who can code. It will belong to the people who understand humans well enough to know what should be built in the first place.
The role of leadership is no longer just managing workflows — it is shaping the environment in which hybrid creators can think, act, and build responsibly at unprecedented speed.
New Tools for the New Design Reality
To help you find problems worth solving and to design and execute experiments, I created a couple of visual and collaborative tools to help you thrive in this new reality. Download them both from my store and enjoy!
No. AI has not killed design thinking, but it has changed the context in which it operates. Traditional design thinking frameworks assumed that building was slow and expensive. With AI accelerating the creation of prototypes and software, design thinking evolves from a staged process into a continuous cycle of experimentation and decision-making.
2. How are the roles of designers and engineers changing with AI?
AI blurs the traditional boundaries between designers and engineers. Designers can now generate working code and functional prototypes, while engineers can explore user experience and interface design. The future favors hybrid creators who can both understand human needs and rapidly implement solutions.
3. What becomes the main focus of design in an AI-driven product environment?
The primary focus shifts from producing artifacts to guiding decision-making and protecting human trust. Design becomes the discipline that helps teams prioritize meaningful experiments, interpret real-world feedback, and ensure that rapid technological development remains aligned with human values and needs.
Image credits: ChatGPT
Content Authenticity Statement: The topic area, key elements to focus on, etc. were decisions made by Braden Kelley, with a little help from ChatGPT to clean up the article and add citations.
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Progress is a powerful human motivator. But unfortunately, many teams mark progress only when projects are complete or big milestones are crossed. They don’t often celebrate small wins that build up to those big completions.
But recent research suggests that small wins celebrated regularly are a more potent way to keep teams engaged and motivated. In a landmark study from Teresa Amabile, participants were most energized and motivated not in the aftermath of a big celebration, but when they had little breakthroughs — when they found small wins to celebrate.
In this article, we’ll outline four keys to celebrate small wins on teams more powerfully, so that small wins can have a BIG effect on your team’s motivation.
1. Celebrate Daily
The first key to celebrating small wins on teams is to celebrate daily. It’s important to have a ritual on your team where wins are celebrated on a regular basis — preferably daily. Celebrating daily has two big effects on teams. The first is that it becomes something embedded in the culture and something that makes the day feel incomplete without the celebration moment. The second is that it reinforces the message that a win is a win no matter how small, and that gradually encourages the team to look beyond big milestones and appreciation smaller victories much more.
There are a few good ways to celebrate daily. You could end each day with a different member of the team sharing their win, with a new person every day. Or if you have the time, you could do one win per person every day. But you could also make it a game by trying to find three wins each day and seeing how long into the day it takes to get there. If you’re on site, hang a whiteboard where everyone can see it. If you’re remote or hybrid, make it a dedicated channel in Slack, Teams, or whatever communication tool you use. Regardless, celebrate daily in order to reiterate the concept that there is something worth celebrating every single day.
2. Celebrate Progress
The second key to celebrating small wins on teams is to celebrate progress. As reviewed above, progress is a powerful human motivator. Many teams only measure progress based on external markers like milestones or project completions. And that can be highly motivating and an easy way to connect small wins to progress. Even if it’s a very little victory, when it’s listed, you can talk about how that win brings the team closer to a significant milestone or to project completion.
But savvy leaders connect small wins to internal progress as well. Many individual victories listed during daily small win sessions will be more indicative of that person’s improved skills or career progress. So, make the effort to remind the person celebrating how that win never would have happened without the growth in a specific area that you’ve noticed over time — and even better if you can point to the future growth that win suggests. Between external and internal markers of progress, it should be simple to connect every victorious moment to the momentum of your team.
3. Celebrate Contributions
The third key to celebrating small wins on teams is to celebrate contributions. Work is teamwork. Most victories are a team effort — even small wins. It may have been volunteering to help on a specific project, or just handing off their work in a timely fashion so the next person could build upon it. Some people do have small wins in isolation, but more likely someone else’s effort contributed in some way to that person’s success. So, when one teammate is stating their win, make sure they’re also expressing gratitude to the teammates that helped them.
Ideally, teammates learn over time to use small win celebrations as a gratitude exercise as well. But as a leader you may need to model the way during your shares and ask specific questions that draw out the contribution when others share. Overtime, that should turn celebrating contributions into a regular habit on the team. And the team will internalize their interdependence upon each other — and celebrate their collaborations as well.
4. Celebrate Impact
The fourth key to celebrating small wins on teams is to celebrate impact, as in celebrate the impact that this win is going to have not on the team but on the people who that team serves. Progress is a potent motivator but it’s even more potent when combined with a sense of purpose. And the clearest, more powerful way to help employees feel purpose in their work is to connect their work to an act of service — the more specific the connection the better. Leaders ought to provide a concise answer to the question “who is served by the work that we do.” The “who” could be customers or end users, or stakeholders, or even other teams inside the organization who are enabled by the work your team does.
So, when teams celebrate small wins, help them connect the win to how it serves those beneficiaries. Hopefully, they notice the connection on their own but if not, you may need to ask specific questions that draw that connection out. Ending each celebration session with a connection to impact and purpose reminds people that their work matters—and hence their wins matter as well.
In the end, that’s what most individuals and teams need to be motivated by their work. They need to know their work matters. And a daily ritual of celebrating small wins (and the contributions, progress, and impact of those wins) becomes a daily reminder of what matters. And that should motivate everyone on the team to do their best work ever.
For decades, our relationship with technology has been transactional. We command, and the machine responds. We click, type, and swipe, paying an ever-increasing “Cognitive Tax” for every digital efficiency we gain. This constant demand for explicit interaction has led to a plateau of digital fatigue — an expensive noise that often drowns out the very purpose it was meant to serve.
We are now entering a new era: Ambient Experience Intelligence (AXI). These are systems that move beyond the screen. They sense human presence, emotion, and context, responding not to our commands, but to our indications.
“The most profound technologies are those that disappear. They weave themselves into the fabric of everyday life until they are indistinguishable from it.” — Braden Kelley
AXI represents a fundamental shift in the innovation paradigm. It moves us from building interfaces to cultivating the conditions for human flourishing. By creating environments that adjust information flow, lighting, or collaboration dynamics based on our cognitive load, we allow humans to stay in ‘flow state’ longer and innovate at the edge of their potential.
II. The Architecture of Invisible Intelligence
To move beyond traditional interfaces, we must build an Invisible Architecture. This is not a single piece of software, but an ecosystem of sensors and logic gates designed to interpret the nuances of human behavior without requiring a single keystroke.
Sensing Context vs. Recording Data
The first pillar of AXI is Contextual Awareness. Through computer vision, spatial audio, and thermal sensing, environments can now distinguish between a high-intensity brainstorming session and a moment of quiet reflection. This isn’t about surveillance; it’s about reception.
Key Sensing Modalities:
Cognitive Load Detection: Monitoring physiological markers (like pupil dilation or speech patterns) to detect when a team is reaching the point of mental burnout.
Biometric Harmony: Adjusting environmental variables — CO2 levels, color temperature, and white noise — to maintain the optimal “biological rhythm” for the task at hand.
Response Frameworks: The Subtle Shift
The final stage is the Actionable Response. In a human-centered AXI system, the response is never jarring. If the system detects high cognitive load, it doesn’t sound an alarm; it subtly shifts the lighting to a warmer hue and filters non-urgent digital notifications. As Braden Kelley often points out, the goal is to create conditions for success, ensuring that the environment becomes a silent partner in the creative process.
III. The Competitive Landscape: Pioneers of Ambient Intelligence
The shift toward Ambient Experience Intelligence (AXI) is being led by a mix of infrastructure giants and specialized innovators. These organizations are moving away from the “App Economy” and toward a “Presence Economy,” where value is created through environmental awareness.
The Infrastructure Giants
Google (Soli Radar): Utilizing miniature radar to sense sub-millimeter human movements and intent without cameras.
Apple: Leveraging the Neural Engine and spatial audio to create “Environmental Hand-offs” between devices and rooms.
Specialized Innovators
Hume AI: Building the “semantic space” for emotion, allowing systems to interpret vocal and facial expressions.
Butlr: Using thermal sensors to track spatial utilization and human “dwell time” while maintaining absolute privacy.
The Rise of the “Cognitive Sensing” Startup
Beyond the household names, companies like Smart Eye and Affectiva are pioneering the sensing of cognitive load and fatigue. Originally designed for automotive safety, these technologies are migrating into the workspace. They represent the “edge of human behavior” where innovation meets neurobiology.
“When we evaluate the winners in this space, we shouldn’t look at who has the most data, but who has the highest Integrity of Intent. The leaders will be those who use AXI to protect human focus, not those who exploit it for attention.” — Braden Kelley
IV. AXI in Action: Case Studies in Human Flourishing
Theory only takes us so far. To understand the true power of Ambient Experience Intelligence, we must look at where the “edge of human behavior” meets critical environmental needs. These two scenarios illustrate the shift from reactive tools to proactive conditions.
Case Study A: The Adaptive, Compassionate Hospital Room
The Friction: Traditional recovery rooms are sensory minefields. Alarms, harsh fluorescent lighting, and constant clinical interruptions create a “Stagnant Dream” of recovery, where the environment actually hinders the healing process.
The AXI Solution: By integrating circadian lighting and acoustic sensors, the room “senses” the patient’s sleep state. Non-critical notifications are routed silently to nurse wearables, and lighting shifts to a soft amber when the patient stirs at night.
“This is innovation with purpose. The technology recedes so the body’s natural healing can take center stage.” — Braden Kelley
Case Study B: The Flow-State Cognitive Workspace
The Friction: The modern office is a battleground for attention. Constant interruptions destroy the “momentum” required for deep innovation.
The AXI Solution: Using thermal presence sensors and cognitive load detection, the workspace identifies when a team has entered a “Flow State.” The environment responds by activating directional sound masking and automatically updating “Deep Work” statuses across all digital communication channels — without the team ever having to click a button.
In both cases, the result is the same: the system takes on the burden of context management, leaving the human free to focus on what matters most — healing, creating, and connecting.
V. The Ethics of Presence: Trust and Integrity in AXI
The more an environment understands about us, the more vulnerable we become. As we move toward systems that sense our emotions and cognitive states, we must build upon a Foundation of Absolute Integrity. Without trust, AXI will be rejected as invasive surveillance; with trust, it becomes an essential partner in human flourishing.
The “Creepy” Threshold
Innovation at the edge of human behavior requires a delicate touch. To avoid crossing the “creepy threshold,” AXI systems must prioritize Edge Processing. This means that data — such as thermal maps or vocal tones — should be processed locally within the room or device, ensuring that sensitive raw data never reaches the cloud.
Three Pillars of Ethical AXI:
Radical Transparency: Humans must always know *what* is being sensed and *why* the environment is responding.
Data Sovereignty: The “script” of the experience must remain under the individual’s control. Opt-out should be the default, not a hidden setting.
Purposeful Limitation: Sensing must be mapped to a specific human benefit. If it doesn’t reduce cognitive load or increase safety, it shouldn’t be sensed.
Integrity as a Design Requirement
As Braden Kelley often advises, trust is the currency of the modern enterprise. In an AXI-enabled world, Trust happens at the speed of transparency. When users feel the environment is acting in their best interest — protecting their focus and honoring their privacy — they grant the system the permission it needs to truly innovate.
“Privacy is not the absence of data; it is the presence of agency.”
VI. Conclusion: Designing for the Edge of Human Behavior
The journey into Ambient Experience Intelligence is more than a technical migration; it is a philosophical one. We are moving away from the era of “Silicon-First” design and toward an era where the environment itself acts as a scaffold for human potential. When we remove the friction of the interface, we uncover the true capacity of the individual.
The Goal: Conditions for Flourishing
As we have explored, AXI allows us to build the “Muscle of Foresight” within our physical spaces. An office that anticipates a team’s need for deep work or a hospital that protects a patient’s rest is an organization that has mastered the art of “Invisible Innovation.” This is where the edge of human behavior becomes a comfortable, sustainable center.
“True innovation isn’t loud; it is the quiet, purposeful support that makes the performance of our daily lives possible. By building environments that sense and respond with integrity, we aren’t just making rooms ‘smart’ — we are making humans ‘free’.”
— Braden Kelley
The Path Forward for Leaders
To lead in the age of AXI, you must stop asking, “What can this technology do?” and start asking, “How should this environment feel?” When purpose drives the script, and innovation provides the stage, the result is a performance of value that truly matters.
Are you ready to build a foundation of trust and innovate at the edge of what’s possible?
The Privacy-First AXI Checklist
A Leader’s Guide to Ethical Ambient Innovation
Use this checklist to evaluate AXI vendors and internal projects. If you cannot check every box in a category, your project risks crossing the “creepy threshold.”
1. Data Sovereignty & Agency
✔ Explicit Opt-In: Do users provide meaningful consent before environmental sensing begins?
✔ The “Off Switch”: Is there a physical or highly visible digital way for a human to immediately suspend sensing?
2. Technical Integrity
✔ Edge Processing: Is raw biometric or spatial data processed locally on the device (at the “edge”) rather than sent to the cloud?
✔ Data Minimization: Does the system collect the *absolute minimum* required (e.g., thermal outlines instead of high-def video)?
3. Purposeful Innovation
✔ Value-Link: Can you clearly articulate how this sensing reduces cognitive load or improves human well-being?
✔ Bias Mitigation: Has the sensing algorithm been audited for equity (ensuring it recognizes diverse voices, skin tones, and abilities)?
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Ambient Experience Intelligence (AXI)?
AXI represents systems that understand human context—like emotion and presence—to adjust the environment without needing a command. It’s about technology that recedes into the background to support human potential.</
How does AXI drive organizational value?
By sensing cognitive load, AXI can automatically filter distractions and optimize workspace conditions. This prevents burnout and ensures that the “muscle memory” of innovation stays sharp across the workforce.
What is the “Creepy Threshold” in Ambient Intelligence?
This refers to the fine line between helpful anticipation and intrusive surveillance. Successful AXI implementation avoids this by using privacy-first technologies like thermal sensing and edge processing, ensuring the system serves the human rather than just monitoring them.
Disclaimer: This article speculates on the potential future applications of cutting-edge scientific research. While based on current scientific understanding, the practical realization of these concepts may vary in timeline and feasibility and are subject to ongoing research and development.
Image credits: Google Gemini
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As a technologist it’s important to know the maturity of a technology. Like people, technologies are born, they become children, then adolescents, then adults and then they die. And like with people, the character and behavior of technologies change as they grown and age. A fledgling technology may have a lot of potential, but it can’t pay the mortgage until it matures. To know a technologies level of maturity is to know when it’s premature to invest, to know when it’s time to invest, to know when to ride it for all it’s worth and time to let it go.
Google has a tool called Ngram Viewer that performs keyword searches of a vast library of books and returns a plot of how frequently the word was found in the books. Just type the word in the search line, specify the years (1800-2007) and look at the graph.
Below is a graph I created for three words: locomotive, automobile and airplane. (Link to graph.) If each word is assumed to represent a technology, the graph makes it clear when authors started to write about the technologies (left is earliest) and how frequently it was used (taller is more prevalent). As a technology, locomotives came first, as they were mentioned in books as early as 1800. Next came the automobile which hit the books just before 1900. And then came the airplane which first showed itself in about 1915.
In the 1820s the locomotives were infants. They were slow, inefficient and unreliable. But over time they matured and replaced the Pony Express. In the late 1890s the automobiles were also infants and also slow, inefficient and unreliable. But as they matured, they displaced some of the locomotives. And the airplanes of 1915 were unsafe and barely flight-worthy. But over time they matured and displaced the automobiles for the longest trips.
[Side note – the blip in use of the word in 1940s is probably linked to World War II.]
But for the locomotive, there’s a story with a story. Below is a graph I created for: steam locomotive, diesel locomotive and electric locomotive. After it matured in the 1840s and became faster and more efficient, the steam locomotive displaced the wagon trains. But, as technology likes to do, the electric locomotive matured several decades after it’s birth in 1880 and displaced it’s technological parent the steam locomotive. There was no smoke with the electric locomotive (city applications) and it did not need to stop to replenish it’s coal and water. And then, because turn-about is fair play, the diesel locomotive displaced some of the electric locomotives.
The Ngram Viewer tool isn’t used for technology development because books are published long after the initial technology development is completed and there is no data after 20o7. But, it provides a good example of how new technologies emerge in society and how they grow and displace each other.
To assess the maturity of the youngest technologies, technologists perform similar time-based analyses but on different data sets. Specialized tools are used to make similar graphs for patents, where infant technologies become public when they’re disclosed in the form of patents. Also, special tools are used to analyze the prevalence of keywords (i.e., locomotives) for scientific publications. The analysis is similar to the Ngram Viewer analysis, but the scientific publications describe the new technologies much sooner after their birth.
To know the maturity of the technology is to know when a technology has legs and when it’s time to invent it’s replacement. There’s nothing worse than trying to improve a mature technology like the diesel locomotive when you should be inventing the next generation Maglev train.
Image credit: Wikimedia Commons, Google Ngram
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AI, as in artificial intelligence, is the hot topic of the past two years. The experts say we’ve barely opened the door on AI’s possibilities. We all know AI stands for artificial intelligence, and a simple definition of AI, as it applies to customer service and experience (CX), is technology that can think and learn like humans to help solve problems and answer questions, making companies and their employees more productive and efficient.
I’ve shared alternative meanings of AI before, such as Artificial Incompetence, in my past articles and videos. I thought it would be fun to expand on those. So, here are some more alternative definitions of AI:
AI = Avoiding Inconvenience: This is one of my favorite definitions of AI. If you had the choice of getting an answer to your question immediately or waiting on hold for 10 minutes, which would you choose? (That’s a rhetorical question.) AI is your friend. And, AI can eliminate waiting on hold, having to prove you’re a customer and other time-consuming activities. AI, as in Avoiding Inconvenience, is super-efficient and eliminates friction from the customer experience. You might even call this version of AI Absolutely Immediate.
AI = Always Interested: AI will always try to help the customer. Even though it may fail at times, the goal of using AI to support CX and customer support is to take care of the customer. That’s what AI is programmed to do, which is why it appears to be Always Interested in helping the customer.
AI = Artificial Incompetence or Almost Intelligent: This is a definition of AI we want to avoid. AI can make mistakes. Sometimes it misunderstands customers or concocts and shares fictitious information that seems correct but is Absolutely Incorrect. Experiences like this give AI and chatbots a bad reputation. So, here’s a good AI strategy: Avoid Incompetence.
AI = Always Improving: As fast as we program and teach AI to support our customers, it is learning even faster. Things that AI couldn’t do a few months ago are routine today. Furthermore, customers are now experiencing human-like responses versus the robotic responses they were used to just a year or two ago. The point is that the technology is Always Improving.
AI = Amazing Impact: If nothing else, we can all agree that AI can transform the customer experience by personalizing interactions at scale and freeing human customer support agents to handle complex issues rather than answering basic questions all day. This makes businesses more productive while improving the customer experience.
With all of these alternative definitions of AI, most of them positive, it’s important to remember that AI is just a tool. It’s only as good as how you use it. The companies getting AI right know they can’t go “all in” on AI and replace the human experience. I’ve interviewed dozens of executives from some of the largest brands on the planet, and not one of them thinks AI will replace people. The key is to find the right balance between AI and the human experience to create an Amazing Impact.
Image credits: ChatGPT, Shep Hyken
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In my work with global enterprises, I often observe a recurring struggle: The Stability Paradox. Legacy organizations often possess the “fixedness” required for massive scale but lack the fluidity to respond to market shifts. Conversely, startups possess “flexibility” in spades but often collapse under their own weight due to a lack of foundational structure.
Defining True Agility
Many leaders mistake speed for agility. Speed is simply high-velocity movement in a single direction. True Agility is the architectural capability to change direction at speed without destroying the engine. It is the move from “reactive maneuvering” — constantly putting out fires — to “proactive orchestration,” where the organization anticipates the flame and adjusts its posture before the heat is even felt.
Thesis: Organizational agility is not about being liquid or formless; it is about strategic architecture. It requires knowing exactly which parts of your foundation must remain fixed to provide a stable spine, so that the rest of the enterprise can remain infinitely flexible.
II. The Human Side of Agility (Human-Centered Change)
Fueling the Adaptive Machine with Mindset and Culture
Psychological Safety as a Fuel
An agile architecture is useless if the people within it are too terrified to move. Psychological safety is the essential fuel for change. If employees fear that a “failed” experiment or a missed pivot will result in professional retribution, they will default to the status quo every time. To be truly agile, the organization must celebrate the learning gained from failure as much as the success of a win.
Shifting the Mindset: Adaptability Over Efficiency
For decades, management science focused on “Efficiency-First” — doing things right through rigid optimization. In a volatile world, we must pivot to “Adaptability-First” — ensuring we are doing the right things as the market shifts. This requires a cultural “unlearning” where we value the ability to pivot just as highly as the ability to execute.
Radical Transparency and Communication Loops
Agility requires that the “edges” of the organization — the people talking to customers and witnessing market friction — have a direct line to the “center.” By creating radical transparency and shortened communication loops, we ensure that institutional knowledge flows at the speed of the internet, allowing for collective intelligence rather than top-down bottlenecks.
The Human Truth: You cannot mandate agility; you can only design an environment where it is safe to be agile. Change doesn’t happen in the boardroom; it happens in the hearts and minds of the people on the front lines.
III. The Braden Kelley Organizational Agility Framework™
Navigating the Strategic Tension Between Flexibility and Fixedness
Introduction to the Framework
In my research and consulting, I developed the Organizational Agility Framework™ as a diagnostic tool for the modern enterprise. It moves away from the idea that everything in a business should be “fluid.” Instead, it focuses on identifying the necessary friction and structural integrity required to support rapid movement.
The Core Tension: Flexibility vs. Fixedness
The secret to sustained agility lies in the deliberate management of two opposing states:
The Fixed: These are your non-negotiables. They include your core values, organizational purpose, and essential guardrails. These elements provide the “stable spine” and the psychological certainty employees need to take risks.
The Flexible: These are your “modular” components. They include business processes, resource allocation models, and team structures. These must be designed to be disassembled and reconfigured in real-time as market conditions evolve.
Managing the Equilibrium
The framework teaches leaders how to prevent “Fixedness” from decaying into Rigidity (where you become a dinosaur) and how to prevent “Flexibility” from dissolving into Chaos (where you lose your brand identity). Agility is the active, daily management of this equilibrium.
Insight: If you try to make everything flexible, you create an organization with no memory and no identity. If you keep everything fixed, you create a monument to the past. Agility is the art of knowing what to hold onto and what to let go.
IV. Designing for Modular Change
Architecting the Reconfigurable Enterprise
Loose Coupling and Micro-Structures
In a truly agile organization, we must abandon monolithic, deeply intertwined departmental silos. Instead, we move toward “Loose Coupling.” By organizing into small, cross-functional squads with clear interfaces, we ensure that one part of the business can pivot or fail without bringing down the entire system. This modularity allows for “plug-and-play” innovation.
Resource Fluidity: Escaping the Annual Budget Trap
You cannot have an agile strategy if your capital is locked in a 12-month fixed cycle. Resource Fluidity is the ability to shift talent and funding dynamically as opportunities arise. Agile organizations treat budgets as “living documents,” allowing leadership to pull resources from declining initiatives and inject them into high-growth “breakthrough” experiments in real-time.
Rapid Prototyping for Organizational Structure
We often prototype products, but we rarely prototype structure. Before committing to a company-wide reorganization, agile leaders run small-scale organizational experiments. By testing a new reporting line or a new collaborative workflow within a single “pilot” team, we can validate the human impact of the change before scaling it.
The Design Rule: Complexity is the enemy of agility. If your organizational chart requires a map and a legend to navigate, you aren’t built for speed — you’re built for bureaucracy. Simplify to amplify.
V. Measuring What Matters: Agility Metrics
Quantifying the Velocity and Resilience of Change
Time-to-Insight vs. Time-to-Action
In a traditional enterprise, the gap between identifying a market shift (Insight) and actually deploying a response (Action) can be months or even years. Agility is measured by the shrinkage of this gap. We must track our Latency of Decision — the speed at which data travels from the front lines to the decision-makers and back into the field as an executed strategy.
Learning Velocity
Success is a lagging indicator; Learning Velocity is a leading one. How quickly can your organization ingest new information, test it, and turn it into institutional knowledge? By measuring the number of validated experiments per quarter rather than just “project completions,” we shift the focus from output to outcomes.
The Resilience Score
Agility is as much about defense as it is offense. A Resilience Score assesses how much of a “shock” your organization can absorb — be it a supply chain disruption or a competitor’s surprise launch — without a significant drop in service levels or employee engagement. An agile organization doesn’t just bounce back; it “bounces forward” into a new, more relevant state.
The Measurement Shift: If you only measure efficiency, you will optimize yourself into extinction. You must measure your capacity to change, for that is where your future revenue lives.
VI. Conclusion: The Agile Organization as a Living System
Sustaining Competitive Advantage in a Volatile World
Beyond the Project Mindset
We must stop viewing “agility” as a transformation project with a start and end date. True organizational agility is a continuous practice — a state of being. It is the transition from seeing your company as a static machine to viewing it as a living system. Like any organism, your business must constantly sense, respond, and evolve to its environment to survive.
The Polymath Leader
The leaders of tomorrow must be comfortable with the “Whole-Brain” approach. They must be part scientist, using data and the Agility Framework to maintain the stable spine of the company, and part artist, using empathy and human-centered change to inspire the flexibility of the workforce. This balance is the only way to navigate the tension between what must remain fixed and what must remain fluid.
Your Sustainable Advantage
In an era where technology can be copied and capital is a commodity, your ability to change is your only sustainable competitive advantage. By architecting an enterprise that embraces both the comfort of fixed values and the excitement of flexible processes, you don’t just survive disruption — you become the disruptor.
Final Thought: Agility is the ultimate expression of confidence. It is the belief that no matter how the world changes, your organization has the structural integrity and the creative spirit to meet the moment. Let’s stop fearing the pivot and start building the platform that makes it possible.
Implementation Checklist: Activating the Agility Framework
Practical First Steps for the Human-Centered Leader
Moving from theory to practice requires a deliberate focus on the Fixed/Flexible balance. Use this checklist to audit your current state and begin the transition.
Identify Your “Stable Spine”:
Document the 3-5 core values and the overarching purpose that must remain Fixed. Do your teams know these are the non-negotiable guardrails?
Audit for “Rigid Decay”:
Locate one process that exists “because we’ve always done it that way” but no longer serves the customer. Mark it as Flexible and schedule a redesign.
Establish a “Safe-to-Fail” Zone:
Designate one small-scale project where the team is explicitly rewarded for Learning Velocity rather than just the final ROI.
Assess Communication Latency:
Track how many days it takes for a customer insight from the field to reach a decision-maker. Aim to reduce this Time-to-Insight by 20% this quarter.
Beta-Test a “Squad” Structure:
Select one departmental silo and “loosely couple” a cross-functional team (e.g., Marketing, Tech, and Customer Success) to solve a single specific friction point.
Braden’s Tip: Don’t try to change the whole organization at once. Agility is built through fractal change — successful small pivots that create a blueprint for the larger enterprise to follow.
What is a Stable Spine Audit?
In my Organizational Agility Framework, a Stable Spine Audit is a strategic exercise used to identify the permanent, non-negotiable elements of an organization that provide the structural integrity required to support rapid change elsewhere.
Think of it this way: for a human to move with agility — to sprint, jump, or pivot — the spine must remain strong and aligned. If the spine is “mushy,” the limbs have no leverage. In a business, if everything is up for grabs, you don’t have agility; you have chaos.
The Core Components of the Audit
When I lead an organization through this audit, we look for three specific types of “Fixedness”:
1. Core Purpose and North Star: Why does the organization exist beyond making a profit? This should be fixed. If your purpose pivots every six months, your employees will suffer from “change fatigue” and lose trust.
2. Values and Ethical Guardrails: These are the behavioral non-negotiables. They define how we work. These provide psychological safety because employees know that even in a crisis, the “rules of engagement” won’t shift.
3. Essential Architecture: This identifies the critical systems or data standards that must remain centralized and standardized to allow for “plug-and-play” flexibility in the branches or squads.
How to Conduct the Audit
The audit is essentially a filtering process for every major component of your business. You ask your leadership team: “Is this a Spine element or a Wing element?”
Category
The Stable Spine (Fixed)
The Flexible Wings (Fluid)
Strategy
Long-term Vision & Purpose
Quarterly Tactics & Experiments
Structure
Governance & Core Values
Cross-functional Squads & Roles
Process
Essential Compliance & Quality
Daily Workflows & Tools
People
Cultural DNA & Talent Standards
Specific Skills & Resource Allocation
Why It Matters for Innovation
I often see teams that are “frozen” because they don’t know what they are allowed to change. By conducting a Stable Spine Audit, you explicitly tell your team: “These five things are fixed. Everything else is a variable you can experiment with.”
This clarity actually increases the speed of innovation because it removes the “permission bottleneck.” When the spine is stable, the wings can flap as fast as they need to.
Diagnostic Questionnaire: Activating the Organizational Agility Framework
A Leadership Workshop Guide to the Stable Spine Audit
To help you activate the Organizational Agility Framework, here is a diagnostic questionnaire designed to be used in a leadership workshop. The goal is to reach a consensus on what belongs to the “Spine” (Fixed) and what belongs to the “Wings” (Flexible).
Phase 1: Identifying the Fixed (The Stable Spine)
Ask your leadership team to answer these questions individually, then compare notes. Discrepancies here usually indicate where organizational friction is coming from.
The “North Star” Test: If we changed our product line entirely tomorrow, what is the one reason for existing that would stay exactly the same?
The Value Constraint: What are the three behaviors that, if an employee violated them, would result in immediate dismissal regardless of their performance?
The Architectural Anchor: What is the single source of truth (data, brand guideline, or compliance rule) that every department must use to remain part of the collective whole?
The Non-Negotiable Promise: What is the one promise we make to our customers that we would never “pivot” away from, even for a massive short-term profit?
Phase 2: Identifying the Fluid (The Flexible Wings)
Now, look at the areas where the organization feels “slow.” These are likely things that are currently “Fixed” but should be “Flexible.”
The “Shadow” Processes: Which of our current “standard operating procedures” (SOPs) were created more than two years ago and haven’t been updated since?
The Permission Bottleneck: Who has the authority to spend $5,000 to test a new idea? If the answer is “The VP,” that process is too Fixed.
The Role Rigidity: Are our job descriptions based on tasks (Fixed) or outcomes (Flexible)? Can we move a person from Project A to Project B in 24 hours without a HR mountain to climb?
The Budgeting Cycle: If a massive market opportunity appeared tomorrow, how long would it take to reallocate 10% of our budget to pursue it?
The Audit Tally
Once you have these answers, map them out:
Green Zone: Elements everyone agrees are Fixed. These are your strengths.
Red Zone: Elements everyone agrees are Fixed but should be Flexible. These are your targets for immediate “unlearning.”
Grey Zone: Elements where the team disagrees. This is where your cultural friction lives.
Closing the Audit
As an innovation speaker, I always remind leaders: The Spine is for Support, not for Strangulation. The goal of this audit isn’t to create more rules, but to create the clarity that allows for more freedom.
1. What is the difference between organizational speed and organizational agility?
Speed is the velocity of movement in a single direction. Agility is the architectural capacity to change direction at speed without breaking the organization. While speed is about execution, agility is about reconfigurability.
2. Why does the “Stable Spine” actually help an organization move faster?
A “Stable Spine” (fixed core values, purpose, and guardrails) provides psychological safety and clarity. When employees know exactly what is non-negotiable, they no longer need to seek permission for everything else, effectively removing the “permission bottleneck” that slows down innovation.
3. How do you identify if a process should be ‘Fixed’ or ‘Flexible’?
Use the Stable Spine Audit. If a process protects your core DNA, ethical standards, or brand promise, it is “Fixed.” If a process is simply a method for delivery, resource allocation, or internal workflow, it should be “Flexible” and modular to allow for rapid adaptation to market shifts.
Content Authenticity Statement: The topic area, key elements to focus on, etc. were decisions made by Braden Kelley, with a little help from Google Gemini to clean up the article and add citations.
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We are standing at the threshold of the most significant shift in human history: the transition from tools we operate to systems we inhabit.
The End of the Mouse and Keyboard
For decades, the primary bottleneck for human intelligence has been the physical interface. Our thoughts move at the speed of light, yet we are forced to translate them through the “clunky” mechanical latency of typing on a keyboard or clicking a mouse. In 2026, these methods are increasingly viewed as legacy constraints. Neuroadaptive Interfaces (NI) bypass these barriers, allowing for a seamless flow of intent from the mind to the digital canvas.
Defining Neuroadaptivity
Traditional software is reactive — it waits for a command. Neuroadaptive systems are proactive and bidirectional. By monitoring neural oscillations and physiological markers, these interfaces adapt their behavior in real-time. If the system detects you are entering a state of “flow,” it silences distractions; if it detects “cognitive overload,” it simplifies the data density of your environment. It is a system that finally understands the user’s internal context.
The Human-Centered Mandate
As we bridge the gap between biology and silicon, our guiding principle must remain Augmentation, not Replacement. The goal of NI is to amplify the unique creative and empathetic capacities of the human spirit, using machine precision to handle the “cognitive grunt work.” We aren’t building a Borg; we are building a more capable, more focused version of ourselves.
The Braden Kelley Insight: Innovation is the act of removing friction from the human experience. Neuroadaptivity is the ultimate “friction-remover,” turning the boundary between the “self” and the “tool” into a transparent lens.
II. The Mechanics of Symbiosis: How NI Works
Neuroadaptivity isn’t magic; it is the sophisticated orchestration of bio-signal processing and generative UI.
1. The Feedback Loop: Sensing the Invisible
At the core of a neuroadaptive interface is a high-speed feedback loop. Using non-invasive sensors like EEG (electroencephalography) for electrical activity and fNIRS (functional near-infrared spectroscopy) for blood oxygenation, the system monitors “proxy” signals of your mental state. These are translated into a Cognitive Load Index, telling the machine exactly how much “mental bandwidth” you have left.
2. The Flow State Engine
The “killer app” of NI is the ability to protect and prolong the Flow State. When the sensors detect the distinct neural patterns of deep concentration, the interface enters “Deep Work” mode — suppressing notifications, simplifying color palettes, and even adjusting the latency of input to match your cognitive tempo. Conversely, if it detects the theta waves of boredom or the erratic signals of fatigue, it provides “Scaffolding” — contextual hints or automated sub-task completion to keep you on track.
3. Privacy by Design: The Neuro-Ethics Layer
In 2026, the most critical “feature” of any NI system is its Privacy Layer. This is the technical implementation of “Neuro-Ethics.” To maintain stakeholder trust, raw neural data must be processed at the edge (on the device), ensuring that “thought-level” data never hits the cloud. We are moving toward a standard of “Neural Sovereignty,” where the user owns their cognitive signals as a basic human right.
The Braden Kelley Insight: Symbiosis requires transparency. For a human to trust a machine with their neural state, the machine must be predictable, ethical, and entirely under the user’s control. We aren’t building mind-readers; we are building intent-amplifiers.
III. Case Studies: Neuroadaptivity in the Real World
The true value of neuroadaptive interfaces is best seen where human stakes are highest. These real-world applications demonstrate how NI transforms passive tools into intelligent, empathetic partners.
Case Study 1: Precision High-Acuity Healthcare
In complex cardiovascular and neurosurgical procedures, the surgeon’s cognitive load is immense. Traditional monitors provide patient data, but they ignore the surgeon’s mental state. Modern Neuroadaptive Surgical Suites integrate non-invasive EEG sensors into the surgeon’s headgear.
The Trigger: If the system detects a spike in cognitive stress or “decision fatigue” signals during a critical grafting phase, it automatically filters the Heads-Up Display (HUD).
The Adaptation: Non-essential alerts are silenced, and the most critical patient vitals are enlarged and centered in the visual field to prevent inattentional blindness.
The Outcome: A 25% reduction in intraoperative “micro-errors” and significant improvement in surgical team coordination through shared “mental state” awareness.
Case Study 2: Neuroadaptive Learning Ecosystems (EdTech)
The “one-size-fits-all” model of education is being replaced by Agentic AI tutors that use neurofeedback. Platforms like NeuroChat are now being piloted in corporate upskilling and university STEM programs to solve the “frustration wall” problem.
The Trigger: The system monitors EEG signals for “engagement” and “comprehension” correlates. If it detects a user is repeatedly attempting a formula with high theta-wave activity (signaling frustration or zoning out), it intervenes.
The Adaptation: Instead of offering the same theoretical text, the AI pivots to a practical, gamified simulation or a case study aligned with the user’s specific disciplinary interests.
The Outcome: Pilot programs have shown a 40% increase in course completion rates and a 30% faster time-to-mastery for complex technical skills.
The Braden Kelley Insight: These case studies prove that NI is not about “mind control” — it’s about Contextual Harmony. When the machine understands the human’s internal struggle, it can finally provide the right support at the right time.
IV. The Market Landscape: Leading Companies and Disruptors
The Neuroadaptive Interface market has matured into a multi-tiered ecosystem, ranging from medical-grade implants to “lifestyle” neural wearables.
1. The Titans: Infrastructure and Mass Adoption
The major players are leveraging their existing hardware ecosystems to turn neural sensing into a standard feature rather than a peripheral.
Neuralink: While famous for their invasive BCI (Brain-Computer Interface), their 2026 focus has shifted toward high-bandwidth recovery for clinical use and refining the “Telepathy” interface for the general market.
Meta Reality Labs: By integrating electromyography (EMG) into wrist-based wearables, Meta has effectively turned the nervous system into a “controller,” allowing users to navigate AR/VR environments with intent-based micro-gestures.
2. The Specialized Innovators: Niche Dominance
These companies focus on the “Neuro-Insight” layer—translating raw brainwaves into actionable data for specific industries.
Neurable: The leader in consumer-ready “Smart Headphones.” Their technology tracks cognitive load and focus levels, automatically triggering “Do Not Disturb” modes across a user’s entire digital ecosystem.
Kernel: Focusing on “Neuroscience-as-a-Service” (NaaS), Kernel provides high-fidelity brain imaging (Flow) for R&D departments, helping brands measure real-world emotional and cognitive responses to products.
3. Startups to Watch: The Next Wave
The edge of innovation is currently moving toward “Silent Speech” and Passive BCI.
Company
Core Innovation
Zander Labs
Passive BCI that adapts software to user intent without conscious command.
Cognixion
Assisted reality glasses that use neural signals to give a “voice” to those with speech impairments.
OpenBCI
Building the “Galea” platform — the first open-source hardware integrating EEG, EMG, and EOG sensors.
The Braden Kelley Insight: The market is splitting between invasive clinical and non-invasive lifestyle. For most leaders, the non-invasive “wearable neural” space is where the immediate opportunities for workforce augmentation lie.
V. Operationalizing Neural Insight: The Leader’s Toolkit
Adopting Neuroadaptive Interfaces is not a mere hardware upgrade; it is a fundamental shift in management philosophy. Leaders must transition from managing “time on task” to managing “cognitive energy.”
1. Managing the Augmented Workforce
In an NI-enabled workplace, productivity metrics must evolve. Instead of measuring keystrokes or hours logged, leaders will use anonymized “Flow Metrics.” By understanding when a team is at peak cognitive capacity, managers can schedule high-stakes brainstorming for high-energy windows and administrative tasks for periods of detected cognitive fatigue.
2. The Neuro-Inclusion Index
One of the greatest human-centered opportunities of NI is Neuro-Inclusion. These interfaces can be customized to support different cognitive styles — such as ADHD, dyslexia, or autism — by adapting the UI to the user’s specific neural “signature.” We must measure our success by how well these tools level the playing field for neurodivergent talent.
3. From Prompting to Intent Calibration
The skill of the 2020s was “Prompt Engineering.” In 2026, the skill is Intent Calibration. This involves training both the user and the machine to recognize subtle neural cues. Leaders must help their teams develop “Neuro-Awareness” — the ability to recognize their own mental states so they can better collaborate with their adaptive systems.
The Braden Kelley Insight: Operationalizing NI is about respecting the human brain as the ultimate source of value. If we use this technology to squeeze more “output” at the cost of mental health, we have failed. If we use it to protect the brain’s “prime time” for creativity, we have won.
VI. Conclusion: The Wisdom of the Edge
Neuroadaptive Interfaces represent more than just a breakthrough in hardware; they signify the maturation of human-centered design. By collapsing the distance between a thought and its digital execution, we are finally moving past the era where the human had to learn the language of the machine. Now, the machine is learning the language of the human.
The Symbiotic Future
The organizations that thrive in the coming decade will be those that embrace this symbiosis. These interfaces are the ultimate “Lens” for innovation — bringing human intent into perfect focus while filtering out the noise of our increasingly complex digital lives. When we align machine intelligence with the organic rhythms of the human brain, we don’t just work faster; we work with more purpose, clarity, and well-being.
As leaders, our task is to ensure this technology remains a tool for empowerment. We must guard the privacy of the mind with the same vigor that we pursue its augmentation. The goal is a future where technology feels less like an external intrusion and more like a natural extension of our own creative spirit.
The Final Word: Intent is the New Interface
Innovation has always been about extending the reach of the human spirit. Neuroadaptivity is simply the next step in making that reach infinite.
— Braden Kelley
Neuroadaptive Interfaces FAQ
1. What is a Neuroadaptive Interface (NI)?
Think of it as a tool that listens to your brain. It uses sensors to detect your mental state — like how hard you’re concentrating or how stressed you are — and changes its display or functions to help you perform better without you having to click a single button.
2. How do Neuroadaptive Interfaces protect user privacy?
In the era of “Neural Sovereignty,” these devices use edge computing. Your raw brainwaves never leave the device. The system only shares the “result” — like a request to silence notifications — ensuring your actual thoughts stay entirely within your own head.
3. What is the primary benefit of neuroadaptivity in the workplace?
It’s about Human-Centered Augmentation. By detecting “cognitive load,” the technology helps prevent burnout. It acts as a digital shield, protecting your peak focus hours (Flow State) and providing extra support when your brain starts to feel the fatigue of a long day.
Disclaimer: This article speculates on the potential future applications of cutting-edge scientific research. While based on current scientific understanding, the practical realization of these concepts may vary in timeline and feasibility and are subject to ongoing research and development.
Image credits: Google Gemini
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In Silicon Valley, we are in love with disruptive innovations, largely because we make a lot of them and have profited exceedingly well from so doing. But for anyone on the receiving end, the relationship is not so rosy. Yes, the potential for gain is extraordinary, but the path to getting there is strewn with attempts that have fallen far short of the hype. How can one engage responsibly with this sort of opportunity? Here’s a framework that can help.
There are four proven ways to capitalize on disruptive innovation, and they are organized here in terms of escalating risk and reward. Each stair appeals to a different persona in the Technology Adoption Life Cycle, the bottom one attracting conservatives, the second, pragmatists in pain, the third, pragmatists with options, and the fourth, visionaries. Each stair can be managed to its targeted reward, but it is very hard indeed to manage two or more stairs in tandem. Most failures occur because management is not decisive about which gains it is committed to achieving and in what priority order it should be served. Needless to say, there is a better way.
The first use of this framework is to explore the possibilities of each stair for your enterprise. That is, if you were to prioritize this stair, what would success look like, how would you expect to measure it, and what costs and risks would be entailed? You want to talk this through as a team, ensuring everyone gets heard. Specifically, you want to make sure that the adoption personas of the most powerful people in the room do not dominate this part of the dialog. They are likely going to make the call in the end, but it is critical that they hear everyone out before they do.
Let’s try this out with everyone’s latest favorite example—generative AI. Imagine you are a member of the executive team at a pharmaceutical corporation, and you have charged your IT team to come up with a GenAI strategy. Wisely, they have come back to you with an array of options, arranged in a stairway to heaven. Here’s what they might say:
Automate. There is a whole series of regulatory compliance obligations that today we outsource overseas to be serviced by a lower-waged workforce. Not only would automating these tasks reduce our costs, it would also lower the error rate and continuously improve performance as more and more machine learning is put to work. This is a low-risk, modest-return option. There would be no disruption to any of our other operations, and we in IT could learn a lot about a technology that is mutating far faster than anything we have ever seen before.
Reengineer. Our proteomics research scientists are having a real problem with the combinatorial explosion of all the possible 3D configurations a given 2D sequence of amino acids might adopt. By focusing our generative AI models on just this one problem, we can vastly accelerate our discovery phase, transforming our problem set from completely intractable to continuously improving. This is a medium-risk, high-return opportunity that is confined to a single department, thereby minimizing disruption to the rest of our value chain.
Modernize. Our go-to-market teams are competing for smaller and smaller slices of time from the physician offices they call upon. We need relevant messaging to get the appointment and highly personalized content to get buy-in from both the doctors and the nurses. Today we rely on experience and anecdotal data, which works OK for our long-tenured members but makes recruiting, onboarding, and ramping a nightmare. By focusing our Large Language Model on all the data in our CRM systems, combined with all our data from the labs, clinical trials, patent submissions, as well as the patient records we have access to, we can arm our GenAI with more information than any one human could process. We still will have humans in the loop to monitor and adapt this material throughout the sales process, but they will be much better equipped to compete than ever before. This is a high-risk, high-return opportunity that will impact a large portion of our workforce, so we plan to stage the implementation to capture learnings as we go.
Innovate. Deep Mind’s AlphaGo program taught itself to play go at the highest level by playing against itself millions and millions of times. We think we can take a similar approach to drug discovery. It’s a moon-shot idea, and our data scientists are still in their own discovery phase, but this could be a game-changer for the industry. We’d like to take a VC approach to funding this effort, ring-fencing the funding across several years, but holding ourselves accountable to meeting material milestones along the way.
As you can see, there is a case to be made for each stair, but there is only so much time, talent, management attention, and working capital to go around, so it is critical that the executive team prioritize these four options and sequence them appropriately. Different teams will come up with different priorities. You are not looking for the “right answer.” You are looking for the one that will yield the best risk-adjusted returns for your enterprise under current conditions.
That’s what I think. What do you think?
Image Credit: Geoffrey Moore, Google Gemini
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