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AI Governance Failure: You Don't Know Your Own Organization Seventy-five percent of HR leaders report that managers are overwhelmed and not equipped to lead change. But before you dismiss this as a middle management problem, consider: by the time information reaches the CEO, it has been filtered, softened, and "
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Seventy-five percent of HR leaders report that managers are overwhelmed and not equipped to lead change. But before you dismiss this as a middle management problem, consider: by the time information reaches the CEO, it has been filtered, softened, and "customised to cater to superiors' expectations" at every level. Researchers call it "interpreting upwards."
You're not leading the organization you think you're leading. You're leading the organization people want you to believe exists.
And that organization is a fiction.
In This Episode:
The CEO Bubble Is RealGartner 2025: 75% of managers overwhelmed and unequipped to lead changeCEIBS research: Information is "interpreted upwards" at each level—filtered, softened, divorced from ground truth66% of employees hide aspects of themselves from senior leaders80% of C-suite executives "cover" with almost everyone around themYou Cannot Move an Organization You Don't UnderstandThe org chart is a legal fiction—necessary for compliance, useless for understanding how work gets doneThe 80/20 reality: 20% of people drive 80% of influence—and they're not always the people with titlesWith just 20 influential employees identified through ONA, companies can reach 70% of the entire organizationThe Seven Types of Informal PowerExpertise-Based Power (technical knowledge, organizational memory)Reputational Power (track record, reliability)Relational Power (access to key people, social capital)Cultural Gatekeeping (control over "how things are done here")Information Brokerage (bridging disconnected groups)Resource Control (informal control over budgets, tools, access)Positional Proximity (closeness to decision-makers)Network Position Metrics That MatterDegree Centrality: Direct connections—ability to spread information or resistance quicklyBetweenness Centrality: Bridge between disconnected groups—the brokers with cross-silo perspectiveEigenvector Centrality: Connected to other highly connected people—systemic influenceWhy Your AI Governance Initiative Will FailYou'll launch through formal channels targeting formal authorityYou'll miss the informal systems that actually determine what people doPredictable arc: announcement → compliance → erosion → irrelevanceWells Fargo, Boeing: Executives were the last to know about problems employees understood clearlyYour Seven-Day Action Plan:
Days 1-3: Map one network—ask 15 people across levels: "When you need to get something done outside the normal process, who do you go to?" Days 4-5: Schedule three skip-level conversations two to three levels down Days 6-7: Identify one gap between the organization you thought you had and the organization you actually have
Ready to see your actual organization?
Understanding informal power structures isn't optional for AI governance success. It's the foundation everything else depends on.
organizational network analysis, informal power structures, executive blindness, AI governance failure, organizational psychology, skip-level meetings, change management, CEO bubble, interpreting upwards, informal influencers, psychological safety, organizational intelligence
GUID: ffec9ceb-05b3-4021-85fb-3e8d940d7945
Erscheinungsdatum: 16.2.2026, 22:20:02