Managers are holding organisations together, and it’s burning them out. They’re expected to lead transformation, manage hybrid teams, absorb constant change, and uphold performance, wellbeing and culture—all at once.
Yet, while demands have escalated, support systems remain stuck in another era. We’ve built modern work on outdated infrastructure, and it’s beginning to crack.
Nearly two-thirds of managers report that their responsibilities have increased since 2020. Yet 42% say they now have fewer resources to meet those expectations. That strain is unsustainable. The downstream effects—attrition, disengagement, performance decline—are no longer HR issues alone. They’re business risks.
It’s time to stop treating manager fatigue as a soft issue. We must redesign how we support leadership from the ground up. AI, deployed intentionally, can be a critical part of that redesign.
The middle is the breaking point
Middle managers are the most stretched and least supported layer in the workforce. They aren’t simply executing plans—they’re translating strategy into action, mentoring teams, managing complexity and mediating ambiguity. Yet they do so with less time, less clarity, and less support than ever before.
The result is a systemic leadership bottleneck.
When managers falter, the organisation does too. Teams drift. High performers leave. One study found that employees with unsupported managers are three times more likely to quit within a year. This isn’t about individual grit—it’s about flawed system design.
One-size-fits-all doesn’t fit anyone
Despite good intentions, most leadership development remains misaligned. One-off training sessions, generic toolkits, and static frameworks rarely equip managers for the dynamic, high-stakes decisions they face daily.
Effective support must reflect the unique context in which each manager operates—not just their seniority, but their team composition, function, personality fit and leadership style. A manager leading a technical team faces different realities from one guiding customer-facing staff. Communication preferences, workload variability and team dynamics all matter.
This is where traditional methods break down—and where AI, thoughtfully designed, can step in.
AI as leadership infrastructure, not intervention
The promise of AI in management isn’t automation. It’s augmentation. It’s an invisible co-pilot that lightens cognitive load, identifies emerging team dynamics and offers timely, actionable guidance rooted in context.
When done well, AI becomes a trusted advisor. Consider:
- Instead of generic nudges, AI detects early signals of declining morale and recommends proactive one-to-ones.
- Instead of reactive coaching, managers receive situational prompts—on feedback, prioritisation or conflict resolution—at the moment they’re needed.
- Instead of waiting for quarterly reviews or workshops, managers gain just-in-time clarity in a fast-moving environment.
This isn’t more tech. It’s better support—smarter, more responsive and grounded in real-time relevance.
Trust, ethics and the manager’s seat
For AI to work in leadership, it must be anchored in trust. That requires:
- Transparency around how recommendations are generated
- Privacy =-by-design and ethical safeguards
- Manager control, always
AI should inform, not override. Empower, not surveil. Managers will only adopt AI if it earns their trust. When it does, the impact on their clarity, confidence and team outcomes is profound.
From efficiency to capacity
Too much of today’s workplace technology is optimised for outputs. But the real goal of better management is not to do more. It’s to make better decisions sooner. We need to ask new questions of our tools:
- Does it create space for coaching?
- Does it reduce decision friction?
- Does it elevate clarity in complex or high-pressure moments?
If the answer is yes, then that tool is building leadership capacity—not just efficiency.
Redesigning the system around the people who power it
Manager burnout is not a character flaw. It is a design failure.
You can’t fix systemic pressure with sporadic workshops or inbox PDFs. Managers need intelligent infrastructure that keeps pace with their roles—tools that adapt to the nuance, speed and complexity they face every day.
AI won’t replace the human centre of leadership. But it can protect it—by enabling better focus, smarter decisions, and the capacity to lead well without burning out.
If we want stronger teams, faster execution and healthier organisations, we must start by equipping the humans in the middle—so they can stay, grow and lead with purpose.
Mike Dolen is the CEO of Humancore, a digital platform that uses multiplayer AI to deliver real-time personalised support to managers. He writes at the intersection of leadership, technology and organisational transformation.
