The asteroid and the dinosaurs.
As the number of levels in a hierarchy goes up, the effectiveness of the organization goes down. Each person at each level has their own read of the situation, their own incentives, their own face to save. They slightly modify the order from above to suit themselves. Then the next person modifies it again. By the time a decision made on the seventh floor reaches the customer, it has passed through six rooms and is no longer the decision that was made. This is the classic principal-agent problem from economics, applied to organizations of all kinds — companies, governments, schools, the bureaucracy that manages your land records. It is not a moral failing. It is the cost of asking humans to faithfully relay anything through more than two or three layers.
For most of the twentieth century we paid that cost because there was no alternative. If you wanted to coordinate a thousand people you needed a hierarchy. The hierarchy leaked, but the alternative was no coordination at all. So we built the leaky pipe and accepted the loss. Whole management traditions — General Electric in the eighties, McKinsey at any time — are essentially the art of making a leaky pipe slightly less leaky.
What changes in 2026 is that the alternative now exists.
An AI-enabled small organization does not need seven layers. Most do not need three. A founder with a working set of agents can read the field as well as a regional manager once did, draft a campaign as well as a marketing team, run customer support at a quality the customer notices, and write the production code. The principal and the agent are sometimes the same person, sometimes the same person plus a model, and almost never seven people in a chain. The leak gets short or disappears. Decisions made on Monday morning hit the customer on Monday afternoon — not because the team is heroic, but because there is no chain to corrupt.
This is not a prediction about chatbots replacing knowledge workers. It is a prediction about org-design. The unit of competition is shifting from company size to decision latency, and decision latency is a function of how many human approvals stand between a decision and its execution. AI does not just make the workers cheaper. It makes the layers unnecessary. A small org with good agents can compete with a giant on quality, undercut it on speed, and out-iterate it on every cycle. Three of these competitors at once will eat the giant's lunch in any category that does not require physical capital.
Hence the metaphor. AI is the asteroid that will probably destroy the giant dinosaurs of the organizational world. The organizations being built today don't need 7 levels. Most don't even need 3. Some of them are run by two people and a Claude key, and they are taking serious revenue out of incumbents who employ thousands.
Two qualifiers. Probably. This is a directional trend, not an absolute. The biggest dinosaurs — banks with regulatory moats, telcos with spectrum licences, governments — will outlive the small mammals for a long time, because the moat isn't org-design. And destroy is too clean a word; what actually happens is more like a slow drift, where the small org takes a slice, then another, and one quarter the giant looks at its growth chart and realises the slope has changed. By then the asteroid has been arriving for years.
The implication for builders: do not optimize for the org chart you would have drawn in 2018. The right shape today is two or three people, a model, and a clear decision-loop you can run on Monday morning without asking anyone's permission. Hire only when the leak from not hiring is more expensive than the leak from adding a layer. That trade-off is not what it used to be.
The implication for everyone else: when an AI-enabled three-person company is competing for your attention against a thousand-person incumbent, bet on the three. Not always — but increasingly. The script has flipped.
Tell me if there's another point of view.