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The current focus on AI for individual productivity (e.g., writing a document faster) misses the bigger picture. Fabricio Bloisi believes AI is underhyped because new capabilities allow entire companies to become autonomous, operating for days without human intervention. This shifts the focus from employee efficiency to organizational efficiency.

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The greatest productivity gain from AI in large companies won't be simple job elimination. Instead, AI agents will replace the "hard to manage and motivate human cogs" that create organizational friction. This reduces coordination costs and allows a company's key value-driving employees to execute far more effectively.

While current AI tools focus on individual productivity (e.g., coding faster), the real breakthrough will come from systems that improve organizational productivity. The next wave of AI will focus on how large teams of humans and AI agents coordinate on complex projects, a fundamentally different challenge than simply making one person faster.

Contrary to the popular belief that AI's main purpose is to replace humans for less money, user data shows its primary benefit is enabling entirely new functions. As AI costs rise, the focus will shift from simple cost-cutting to strategic investments in capabilities that were previously impossible.

The focus on AI automating existing human labor misses the larger opportunity. The most significant value will come from creating entirely new types of companies that are fully autonomous and operate in ways we can't currently conceive, moving beyond simple replacement of today's jobs.

While AI can make individuals 10x more productive, this doesn't automatically create a 10x more valuable company. An 'institutional AI' layer is needed to coordinate efforts and align individual output toward shared business goals like scaling revenue.

Most view AI for efficiency, but its true power lies in handling routine tasks to free up human talent. This unlocks capacity for strategic, creative, and relationship-driven work that fuels innovation and growth, shifting the question from cost savings to new capabilities.

AI's primary impact will be augmenting and increasing productivity across entire organizations, not just automating lower-level tasks. The technology can handle a fraction of almost everyone's job, freeing up humans to focus on strategic, creative, and interpersonal work that models cannot perform.

The most significant value from AI is not in automating existing tasks, but in performing work that was previously too costly or complex for an organization to attempt. This creates entirely new capabilities, like analyzing every single purchase order for hidden patterns, thereby unlocking new enterprise value.

Just as electricity's impact was muted until factory floors were redesigned, AI's productivity gains will be modest if we only use it to replace old tools (e.g., as a better Google). Significant economic impact will only occur when companies fundamentally restructure their operations and workflows to leverage AI's unique capabilities.

The productivity boom from AI won't materialize from workers simply using new tools. Citing historical parallels with electricity and computers, the real gains are unlocked only when companies fundamentally restructure their operations and business models around the technology.