Executives have long relied on simple categories to frame how technology fits into organizations: tools automate tasks, people make decisions, and strategy determines how the two work together. But the rise of agentic AI is beginning to blur these familiar distinctions. As noted in “The Emerging Agentic Enterprise: How Leaders Must Navigate a New Age of AI,” a November 2025 report by the MIT Sloan Management Review in collaboration with the Boston Consulting Group, a new class of systems is emerging that does not fit neatly into traditional management frameworks. The study, conducted by Sam Ransbotham, David Kiron, Shervin Khodabandeh, Sesh Iyer, and Amartya Das, explores how organizations are beginning to grapple with this new reality.
“That framing is no longer sufficient,” the authors wrote. “A new class of systems — agentic AI — complicates these boundaries. These systems can plan, act, and learn on their own. They are not just tools to be operated or assistants waiting for instructions. Increasingly, they behave like autonomous teammates, capable of executing multistep processes and adapting as they go.” Notably, 76% of respondents to their global executive survey said they view agentic AI as more like a coworker than a tool.
Agentic AI introduces a fundamentally new category: systems that behave partly like software tools and partly like human coworkers. Traditional management logic assumes that technology either substitutes or complements labor, automates or augments tasks, functions as labor or capital, or behaves as a tool or a worker — but not all at once. Organizations now face an unprecedented challenge: managing a single system that requires both human resource approaches and asset management techniques.
This dual nature creates a set of tensions that traditional management frameworks were never designed to address. “Technology executives focus on technical issues, making pilot, vendor, or infrastructure decisions. IT leaders want predictable, scalable systems with clear technical specifications. Business executives focus on markets, competition, and people. CFOs need investment models with measurable returns and depreciation schedules. HR executives require performance management frameworks and supervision protocols. Business leaders demand both efficiency and adaptability from the same system.” (more…)
