Three Dangerous Myths We’re Still Telling Ourselves About Work
Corporate leaders are increasingly confused. Recently, a senior executive at a global company confessed, “Everything looks right on paper—our strategy is solid, we have great talent, and growth is scaling. But something still feels off.”
That lingering sense that something is broken is becoming the norm. It isn’t because leaders aren’t trying hard enough; it’s because they are making critical decisions based on outdated assumptions.
After 35 years of organizational consulting and analyzing over 1.5 million workplace data points, a clear pattern has emerged: strategies are sound, and people are capable, yet the organizational fabric is quietly tearing. Leaders are navigating a distorted view of reality regarding talent, AI, and culture. If we don’t correct this lens, we risk building the future of work on a foundation of myths.
Here are the three most persistent lies we tell ourselves about work—and the reality hiding beneath them.
Myth #1: Bigger is Automatically Better
For decades, scale was the ultimate proxy for success. The assumption was that bigger companies offer more stability, opportunity, and impact. But unchecked scale introduces a silent killer: distance.
In massive organizations, employees become disconnected from decision-making, meaning, and the tangible impact of their daily tasks. It’s no surprise that Gallup’s latest global report shows only 20% of employees are actively engaged. This isn’t just dissatisfaction; it is a profound structural disconnection.
In the pursuit of ruthless efficiency, companies strip out what researcher Allison Pugh calls “connective labor”—the invisible, often uncompensated work of making colleagues feel seen, heard, and supported. When you automate or eliminate this connective tissue, you don’t just lose morale; you lose the organizational glue that makes everything else function.
People aren’t rejecting large companies; they are rejecting transactional, impersonal environments. The organizations that will win at scale are those that design the human experience just as intentionally as they design their growth metrics.
Myth #2: AI is Coming to Replace Us
The headlines are alarmist: AI is taking our jobs. While the disruption is real, the narrative is fundamentally incomplete.
According to the World Economic Forum, while 92 million jobs may be displaced by AI, 170 million new roles will be created. The net impact isn’t the elimination of human work; it’s a massive transformation. AI is exceptionally good at narrow, predictable, and repeatable tasks. Therefore, it isn’t replacing humans—it’s replacing the narrow, robotic ways we have trained humans to work.
This shift elevates the premium on purely human traits: complex judgment, creativity, empathy, and the ability to connect disparate ideas.
Yet, a glaring disconnect remains. Organizations are pouring millions into AI tools while severely underinvesting in helping their people redefine their roles in an AI-augmented world. The result isn’t efficiency; it’s anxiety and confusion. When companies automate away the human connective tissue—the mentors, mediators, and relationship-builders—they fundamentally alter what it feels like to work there. The opportunity isn’t just to adopt new tech; it’s to reimagine work itself, shifting from narrow execution to integrated, human-centric thinking.
Myth #3: Younger Generations are "Lazy"
This is perhaps the most toxic and misleading misconception in the modern workplace. What older generations label as a "lack of work ethic" is actually a massive shift in expectations.
Younger workers are entering a workforce where the old psychological contract—loyalty in exchange for stability—has been shattered by endless layoffs, restructurings, and epidemic burnout. Deloitte’s global research confirms that Gen Z and Millennials prioritize purpose, flexibility, and well-being just as heavily as compensation.
This isn’t disengagement; it’s recalibration. Younger workers aren’t less committed; they are simply less willing to commit to systems that fail to meet their basic human needs. What leadership interprets as "resistance" is often just discernment—a refusal to participate in environments that feel extractive rather than reciprocal. Loyalty didn’t disappear; unreciprocated care did.
Organizations can no longer use compliance or tenure as proof of engagement. They must build environments where people choose to invest their energy because the work feels meaningful and aligned with their values.
What Most Leaders Are Missing: The "REAL" Framework
Across all three myths, the underlying issue is the same: leaders are failing to question their foundational beliefs.
Every organization operates on two simultaneous systems:
- The Operational System: The visible stuff. Org charts, strategy decks, KPIs, and tech stacks.
- The Human System: The invisible stuff. How trust moves, where fear lives, and who people actually go to when they need the truth.
When these two systems fall out of sync, no amount of strategic planning can close the gap. To realign them, leaders should view their organization through the REAL lens:
- Reality: What core assumptions are we operating on that might no longer be true?
- Experience: What are people actually feeling day-to-day? (Not what we intend for them to feel, but what they actually experience).
- Alignment: Where is the gap between our stated corporate values and the actual employee experience, and how do we close it?
- Leadership: What conditions are we actively creating—intentionally or accidentally—that reinforce this gap?
Organizations don’t fail because they lack a strategy. They fail because they run their human system on autopilot while obsessing over operational processes.
The most important question a leader can ask right now is simple but uncomfortable: What are we actually optimizing for?
The future of work won’t be defined by those who chase the latest disruption. It will be shaped by leaders who correct the distortion, ground themselves in reality, and remember the humanity at the center of it all.
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