Navigated to The Automation Irony: Why Are We Still Working So Hard?

The Automation Irony: Why Are We Still Working So Hard?

February 17
57 mins

Episode Description

Research suggests that 30–50% of today’s work tasks could technically be automated. And yet most of us feel busier than ever.

So what’s going on?

In this episode, we sit down with author, AI strategist, and business coach Steve Ferman to unpack the “automation irony”: the more tools and systems we add, the less time we seem to get back. Instead of blaming the technology, we dig into the real blockers—governance gaps, cultural resistance, change management failures, rising expectations, and leadership blind spots that prevent automation from delivering the relief it promises.

This isn’t an anti-AI episode. It’s a pro-leadership one.


About Our Guest

Steve Ferman is a tech executive, AI strategist, and certified Scaling Up business coach with over 40 years of experience building, scaling, buying, and selling technology companies. Learn more: https://4pillarcoach.com


Key Topics & Takeaways

  • Why automation isn’t a tech problem — it’s an operations problem
  • AI sprawl and shadow AI inside organizations
  • The danger of implementing tools without governance or guardrails
  • Why efficiency gains often lead to raised quotas, not reduced workload
  • The “walled garden trap” and siloed automation efforts
  • How automation quietly shifts burden upstream and creates hidden burnout
  • Why layoffs blamed on AI increase fear and stall adoption
  • The cultural gap between automation promise and employee experience
  • The need for executive alignment before tool selection
  • Why adoption requires enablement, not just software licenses


The Core Insight

Automation is not failing.

Leadership strategy is.

Companies often start with the solution — buying the newest AI tool — instead of identifying the operational bottlenecks they actually need to solve. Without executive buy-in, guardrails, and employee engagement, automation simply becomes another layer of work.

And when time is saved?

Organizations often fill it immediately with more output expectations, reinforcing the productivity paradox instead of relieving it.


Strategic Fixes Proposed

1️⃣ Start with Operations, Not Software

AI should solve clearly defined operational friction, not chase trends. Diagnose before you deploy.

2️⃣ Build Governance Early

Create AI councils, guardrails, usage policies, and clear expectations. Avoid AI sprawl.

3️⃣ Ask Employees First

“What are two tasks you hate doing?”

Automate those first to build trust and momentum.

4️⃣ Protect Reclaimed Time

Hard-code reclaimed hours into the operating model.

Allocate portions to:

  • Innovation
  • Upskilling
  • Strategic thinking
  • Reduced workload


5️⃣ Redefine Productivity

More output is not always better output.

Innovation, morale, and long-term sustainability matter.

6️⃣ Treat AI Like a New Colleague

Onboard it. Train around it. Clarify when human judgment overrides automation.

7️⃣ Keep Humans in the Loop

AI lacks empathy, emotional intelligence, and true reasoning.

The human element remains essential.


Who This Episode Is For

  • Executives implementing AI initiatives
  • HR and People & Culture leaders
  • Founders and startup operators
  • Technology and operations leaders
  • Anyone feeling busier despite automation


The Big Question This Episode Answers

Is automation actually freeing us, or are we just running faster on the same wheel?


Final Take

Automation can absolutely give us time back.

But only if leaders resist the temptation to immediately reinvest every reclaimed minute into higher output expectations.

The real opportunity isn’t just efficiency.

It’s reinvention.

If done right, automation shifts work from execution to strategy, from repetition to creativity, from burnout to innovation.

But that shift requires intentional leadership, cultural clarity, and guardrails.

Otherwise, we're stuck with the burden of knowing we'll never catch up, no matter how many time-saving tools we add.


Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.

Steve Ferman: https://www.linkedin.com/company/4-pillar-coach/ 

• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com


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YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod


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Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.


Disclaimer

A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking. Have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.

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