Guest post by Andrew Lopianowski and Mike Pino who are the authors of HumanCorps: Redesigning Organisations for the Wisdom Age (Routledge, July 2026). Combining decades of expertise across human-centred transformation and organisational redesign with deep knowledge in AI, decision intelligence, enterprise learning, and synthetic enablement, they aim to educate on how organisations can evolve for the Wisdom Age.
Irish businesses don’t need another breathless AI trend report. What they need is a way to turn AI into day-to-day advantage, without breaking trust, burning out teams, or buying yet another platform that nobody uses.
That’s the core idea behind Andrew Lopianowski and my book HumanCorps: Redesigning Organisations for the Wisdom Age (forthcoming, Routledge). The book’s argument is simple (and uncomfortably familiar): we’re trying to run AI-era work on Industrial-era operating models. If your organisation still depends on rigid hierarchies, slow approvals, siloed data, and “tick-box” transformation, the cleverest tools in the world may make you faster, but running in circles faster.
So what does “future-proofing” look like in practice, especially for Irish SMEs and scaling teams that have to compete for talent, serve customers faster, and stay on the right side of European regulation?
Below is a practical, HumanCorps-inspired playbook you can implement without a moonshot budget.
A recurring theme in HumanCorps is that many digital transformations underdeliver because organisations adopt tools without redesigning the system those tools will live inside. The result is familiar: staff work around the shiny new system, adoption stalls, and leaders conclude the tech “didn’t work” when the real issue was how decisions, information, and incentives were set up.
The AI era amplifies that problem. If your workflows and governance are unclear, AI will faithfully automate confusion.
A future-proofing move (this week): pick one customer-facing workflow (e.g., handling inbound sales leads, responding to support queries, producing compliance documentation) and map it end-to-end. Don’t start with “Where can we add AI?” Start with: Where do we lose time, create rework, or wait for approvals?
The fastest way to waste your AI budget is to chase novelty. The fastest way to build momentum is to pick a small number of high-value, repeatable use cases where AI can act as a co-pilot.
Examples most Irish SMEs recognise immediately:
Rule of thumb: if the use case doesn’t save time, reduce errors, or improve customer response times in 30–60 days, it’s not a pilot, it’s a hobby.
AI adoption isn’t primarily a technical change; it’s a leadership and behaviour change. HumanCorps places heavy emphasis on ownership and agency because in a fast, complex environment, the organisation that wins is the one where teams can act decisively without waiting for permission every time reality changes.
That doesn’t mean abandoning oversight. It means shifting leaders toward:
A future-proofing move (this week): appoint an executive sponsor for each pilot with one clear job: remove blockers (access, data, approvals) and insist on metrics.
One of the biggest challenges in organisations of any size often beings with decision rights (i.e., explicitly defining who may make, challenge, or override decisions, under what conditions, with what risk and accountability guardrails).
HumanCorps pushes a pragmatic twist: teams can move faster when they’re given risk envelopes—simple rules for:
This is where AI becomes genuinely useful. Instead of staff asking Slack for the same clarifications repeatedly, you build a system where decisions are made closer to the work, supported by AI, but governed by humans.
A future-proofing move (this week): for your chosen workflow, list the top 10 recurring decisions. For each one, set:
Right now, most workplaces are using AI like a glorified search engine (e.g., drafting emails, summarising text, polishing slides). HumanCorps argues that underplays AI’s potential, and it also creates risk: fragmented, ungoverned use happens in private, with inconsistent quality and unclear data handling.
Future-proofing means treating AI as a shared organisational capability, not a personal productivity trick.
Practical steps:
A future-proofing move (this week): run a 60-minute “show your work” session where teams compare AI-assisted outputs, agree what “good” looks like, and standardise a shared approach.
In Europe, AI isn’t just about speed—it’s also about trust. HumanCorps explicitly connects future performance to trust and ethics, arguing that transparency and bias mitigation need to be designed in—not bolted on. You don’t need a heavyweight bureaucracy to start. You need a habit.
A future-proofing move (this week): create an AI Use Register (a living spreadsheet is fine):
That one artefact will make vendor conversations easier, internal adoption safer, and customer assurance more credible.
HumanCorps is essentially a reminder that the “future of work” is not a software update. It’s a redesign of how we set direction, how we lead, how decisions flow, and how teams learn together so that AI becomes an amplifier of good judgement rather than an accelerator of dysfunction.
If you want a simple challenge: by this time next week, map one workflow, assign decision rights with a risk envelope, and run one AI pilot with a measurable outcome. Do that, and you’ll be more future-proof than organisations still arguing about which chatbot to buy.
See more breaking stories here.
Guest post by Michael Kilarney Co-Founder Genghis AI The 2023 idea of “tax AI” is…
HCS, the Irish IT managed services and digital transformation company, has announced the launch of…
A lot of businesses are overpaying for outdated ways of working, and AI is reshaping…
By David Stephen If someone uses a chatbot for research, it means that the chatbot…
Investment of more than €100 million will double Tyndall’s footprint and strengthen Ireland’s semiconductor and…
Ireland secures €10 million investment to launch national gateway to Europe’s AI network New AIF…
Irish Tech News are Ireland’s No. 1 Online Tech Publication and often Ireland’s No.1 Tech Podcast too.
You can find hundreds of fantastic previous episodes and subscribe using whatever platform you like via our Anchor.fm page here: https://anchor.fm/irish-tech-news
If you’d like to be featured in an upcoming Podcast email us at Simon@IrishTechNews.ie now to discuss.
Irish Tech News have a range of services available to help promote your business. Why not drop us a line at Info@IrishTechNews.ie now to find out more about how we can help you reach our audience.
You can also find and follow us on Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and Snapchat.