Much of the misplaced fear and distrust surrounding AI adoption traces back to a single omission in how people are often introduced to its use. Businesses and the media have fixated on the intelligence aspect while often ignoring the behavioral framework required to make it work in the real world.
The early representation of Generative AI suggested it was a shortcut that required very little effort. If users were told upfront about the level of detail, context-setting, and iterative refinement required to get a usable result, the hype might have been quieter (look how long Anthropic was off the radar of the general public), but the real work with these powerful tools might have started sooner for the average person and business (AI Adoption Puzzle: Why Usage Is Up But Impact Is Not, BCG, 2025)
We are essentially trading traditional coding hours for what some call vibe coding: throwing natural language at a problem and hoping the model catches the intent. Vibe coding is a legitimate way to prototype, but it becomes technical debt if you do not eventually solidify the logic. Replacing a clean specification with an open-ended series of guesses is how projects lose their shape before they find their footing.
The most effective approach is not simply plugging a model into an existing process because it looks like it might help. Genuine acceleration comes from a willingness to rethink how things get done, then determining how AI can facilitate those better ways. It is the difference between automating a flawed process and designing a new one.
The success stories often come from teams who looked at a failed output and wondered what specific lever they forgot to pull. They treat the model as a mirror. If the output is off-base, it usually means the instructions provided were incomplete or lacked the necessary constraints. It is an objective way to see where our own requirements are fuzzy.
This is particularly evident in workflow automation. Earlier automation projects often failed because they only mapped the mechanics. We drew boxes and arrows to show what happened next, but we ignored the intent.
AI-driven automation is succeeding where those attempts fell short because the machine requires the reasoning, not just the step. To make an agent navigate a workflow, you have to document why each step exists. This forces organizations to complete their process definitions rather than paper over the gaps. If you cannot explain the logic behind a decision point, the machine cannot execute it. This forced clarity is the real process improvement.
The Double Standard
There is a noticeable double standard in the modern workplace. When an LLM returns a hallucinated mess or fails a logic branch, we iterate. We refine the prompt. We provide more context. We give the machine a level of professional grace and patience that we rarely extend to our human peers.
Think about what that looks like in practice. A new team member submits work that misses the mark, and the first instinct is to question their judgment or capability. The same output from a model and the instinct is to wonder what context was missing from the prompt. One is treated as a character flaw; the other as a specification problem. They are often the same problem.
If organizations applied that same diagnostic instinct to people, treating an incomplete first draft as a gap in the brief rather than a gap in the person, productivity would likely increase. Instead, we frequently demand accuracy on the first pass from humans while subsidizing the machine’s learning curve with endless retry clicks. (The Human Side of AI Adoption: Lessons From the Field, MIT Sloan Management Review, 2025)
The Same Loop Applies to Both
Closing that gap is not primarily a technology problem. It is a management problem, and the same loop applies whether you are working with a model or a person.
Start by acknowledging that a wrong answer is often a sign of a logic path being tested; it is data, not a failure. Reward the attempt at solving the problem; in early iterations, the goal is narrowing the scope, not delivering the final answer. And when the output is off-base, assume the cause is a lack of clear boundaries before assuming incompetence. These are not novel management principles. They are just easier to see when the thing being managed cannot take it personally.
The teams getting real value out of these tools are not looking for a magic button. They treat the AI as a diagnostic tool for their own process gaps. They do not just want the answer; they want to see where the system broke so they can fix the underlying logic.
The One Attribute That Survives
This brings us to the attribute that determines whether a tool gets abandoned or mastered.
Curiosity is the only attribute and attitude that survives the hype cycle.
Expectations without curiosity lead directly to disappointment. If you aren’t wondering why the model failed, you will just conclude the tool is broken and move on. In a technical context, curiosity is the bridge between a strategy and a result. It leads to both the perseverance and the openness to changing the way we think about how things get done. It forces us to reprioritize the work based on what the machine reveals about our own internal logic.
Proficiency in this landscape is not about mastering a specific toolset, because those change every few weeks. It is about an underlying hunger to understand the mechanics of the work. If you have that curiosity, you will find the ROI because you will keep digging until the logic is sound.
Until next time…
Related reading from What IT Is:
- The Frictionless Trap: AI’s Greatest Benefit is also a Hidden Risk — January 26, 2026
- 3 Lies They’re Telling Us About AI — January 22, 2026
- How to Foster AI Adoption from the Bottom Up — December 6, 2025
- The Highest ROI from AI Automation Starts with Augmentation — July 29, 2025
- Organize AI Augmentation with Notebooks — June 30, 2025
© Scott S. Nelson