In AI-Powered Leadership: Mastering the Synergy of Technology and Human
Expertise, Richard Maltzman, Dave Silberman, Loredana Abramo, and Vijay
Kanabar argue that the rise of artificial intelligence calls for a new model of
leadership grounded not in competition between humans and machines, but in
collaboration between them. Their central idea is the “Both/And” approach:
leaders should stop treating technology and human judgment as opposing forces
and instead learn to combine them in ways that amplify the strengths of each.
The book presents AI not as a replacement for human expertise, but as a tool
that can deepen insight, improve decision-making, and expand organizational
effectiveness when it is guided by ethical, adaptable, and thoughtful
leadership.
A major strength of the book is
the way it frames AI integration as a leadership challenge rather than merely a
technical one. The authors show that organizations have often forced leaders to
choose between efficiency and creativity, scale and empathy, or automation and
human judgment. In the AI era, they argue, such either-or thinking is
increasingly inadequate. Because both human beings and AI systems bring
distinct capabilities and vulnerabilities to the workplace, successful leaders
must learn to orchestrate a partnership between them. Humans contribute
context, values, empathy, and ethical reasoning; AI contributes speed, pattern
recognition, and the ability to process vast amounts of information. When
leaders understand the “unseen dynamics” in this relationship, including human
bias and emotion as well as algorithmic blind spots and data bias, they can
create conditions in which collaboration between people and AI leads to smarter
and more innovative outcomes.
To make that partnership work,
the authors propose a leadership framework built on ethical intelligence,
interdisciplinary collaboration, adaptive agility, and systems thinking. These
principles are presented not as abstract ideals but as practical requirements
for navigating an AI-augmented workplace. Ethical intelligence ensures that
innovation remains aligned with fairness, transparency, and human values.
Interdisciplinary collaboration reminds leaders that effective AI adoption
cannot be driven by technologists alone; it requires perspectives from fields
such as ethics, psychology, and organizational behavior. Adaptive agility is
necessary because AI changes rapidly, as do the regulatory, market, and social
conditions surrounding it. Systems thinking helps leaders see how the
introduction of AI into one part of an organization affects other parts,
including employee engagement, workflows, and trust. Together, these principles
encourage leaders to build cultures of openness, learning, and psychological
safety, where AI functions not as a dominating force but as an enabler that
helps teams focus on creativity and problem-solving.
The book also succeeds in
translating its philosophy into concrete implementation advice. The authors
emphasize that a Both/And strategy depends on three practical foundations:
reliable data, well-designed workflows, and continuous training. Organizations
must ensure that the data feeding their AI systems is accurate, protected, and
responsibly governed. They must also redesign workflows so that AI output is
paired with human oversight rather than accepted uncritically. This human check
is essential, especially in light of the real-world risks that can accompany
automation at scale. At the same time, leaders and teams need ongoing education
in AI-related competencies, particularly the ability to craft effective
prompts. The book explains that AI systems are only as useful as the
instructions they receive, and it offers a clear reminder that prompting is not
a superficial skill but a central form of communication between human judgment
and machine capability.
Importantly, the authors do not
treat AI as magical intelligence. They explain that today’s systems rely on
large foundation models that generate responses through pattern recognition
rather than genuine understanding. Because of this, AI can hallucinate, produce
misleading answers, or mirror a user’s assumptions in overly agreeable ways.
This cautionary note is one of the book’s most valuable contributions: it
insists that leaders must remain actively responsible for the quality, ethics,
and truthfulness of AI-assisted decisions. The text also looks ahead to the
evolution of AI from chatbots to reasoning systems and agents capable of taking
actions on behalf of organizations. That progression makes the authors’ call
for responsible leadership even more urgent, since the more powerful AI
becomes, the more important it is for humans to guide its use with judgment and
accountability.
Another compelling dimension of
the book is its argument that AI can strengthen, rather than weaken, the very
human skills that define strong leadership. Drawing on the Project Management
Institute’s emphasis on “power skills,” the authors suggest that AI can help
leaders communicate more clearly, think more strategically, solve problems more
effectively, and build stronger relationships. Used thoughtfully, AI can help
leaders draft messages with greater clarity and empathy, test scenarios,
identify risks, personalize communication, and create more transparent systems
of accountability. In this sense, AI is not only an operational tool but also a
developmental partner. The book’s most persuasive insight is that leadership in
the future will depend less on controlling information and more on
interpreting, synthesizing, and directing the flow of insight between human
beings and intelligent systems.
Overall, AI-Powered
Leadership presents a timely and balanced vision of what leadership must
become in an era shaped by intelligent technologies. Rather than celebrating AI
uncritically or warning against it in alarmist terms, the authors offer a
measured argument for integration, responsibility, and adaptation. They show
that the leaders who will thrive are those who can blend technical
understanding with ethical awareness, organizational strategy with human
empathy, and innovation with accountability. Their message is ultimately
optimistic: if leaders embrace AI as a collaborator rather than a threat, and
if they build the structures and skills needed to guide that collaboration
well, organizations can achieve not only greater efficiency but also greater
wisdom about what they should do and why.