There’s something happening inside most organizations right now that isn’t being talked about enough.
Work is changing.
Not in a visible, structured way.
But quietly.
Individually.
In ways that leadership doesn’t fully see.
The Gap Between Designed Work and Real Work
Every company has a version of how work is supposed to happen.
Processes. Tools. Workflows. Expectations.
That’s the designed system.
But then there’s the version of work that actually happens.
Employees:
- find faster ways to complete tasks
- use tools that aren’t officially part of the system
- adapt processes on the fly
- create their own ways of getting things done
That’s the real system.
And the gap between those two is growing.
AI Is Accelerating the Shift
AI didn’t create this behavior.
But it’s accelerating it.
Employees now have access to tools that can:
- generate content
- analyze data
- speed up decision-making
- remove steps from traditional workflows
So naturally, they use them.
Sometimes within official systems.
Sometimes outside of them.
Either way, the way work gets done is evolving faster than organizations can document it.
The Same Role, Different Realities
What’s most interesting is that two employees in the same role can now be working in completely different ways.
One may:
- follow structured processes
- move deliberately
- prioritize consistency
Another may:
- use AI heavily
- iterate quickly
- bypass unnecessary steps
Both can produce results.
But the path they take, and the impact they create, can look very different.
And that difference isn’t always visible from the outside.
Why This Matters More Than It Seems
When leaders don’t have visibility into how work is actually happening, it creates confusion.
Performance becomes harder to interpret. Best practices become harder to define. Scaling success becomes harder to replicate.
Because what works for one person may not translate to another.
Not due to effort.
But due to how they operate.
This Isn’t a Process Problem
The instinct is often to tighten control.
More structure. More rules. More standardized workflows.
But that doesn’t solve the problem.
Because the issue isn’t that employees are doing work “wrong.”
It’s that work itself is becoming more individualized.
Where This Is Headed
As work continues to evolve, organizations will need to move beyond managing processes…
And start understanding people at a deeper level.
Not just:
- what they produce
- how fast they work
But:
- how they think
- how they make decisions
- how they naturally approach problems
Because that’s what actually determines how work gets done.
Where Talent Wiring Fits In
This is exactly where Talent Wiring becomes critical.
Because when the way work is done becomes less standardized, understanding how people are wired becomes the only consistent lens.
It provides visibility into:
- how individuals operate
- how they navigate change
- how they create value in evolving environments
And that insight doesn’t break when the workflow changes.
It adapts with it.
The Takeaway
Your organization already has a system for how work is supposed to happen.
But there’s another system forming underneath it.
And it’s moving faster.
The companies that succeed won’t be the ones that try to force everything back into the old model.
They’ll be the ones that learn how to see what’s actually happening — and build around it.
If work is already evolving under the surface, the question becomes:

