“AI is not a technology. It’s the future of the firm.” – Satya Nadella – Microsoft CEO
For more than a century, the defining asset of most companies has been their tangible capital and formal organisation: factories, supply chains, balance sheets, and hierarchies. Artificial intelligence is now forcing a shift towards a different centre of gravity, in which the primary competitive advantage rests on how effectively a firm can institutionalise learning between its people and its machines.1 In this emerging regime, strategy is less about owning a specific technology stack and more about building a resilient capability to absorb, adapt, and compound knowledge across human and computational systems.1,7 That reframing carries deep implications for power structures inside firms, the nature of corporate assets, and the risk of entire industries being hollowed out when they fail to build their own AI-native learning loops.10,19
From IT Function to Organising Principle of the Firm
For much of the late 20th and early 21st century, digital technology sat inside firms as an enabling function: a set of tools for efficiency, communication, and data processing, curated by IT departments and largely decoupled from board-level strategy. Cloud computing and software-as-a-service began to erode that separation, but AI pushes it to breaking point. When AI systems become embedded in workflows, decision-making, and product design, they cease to be a discrete technology and instead become an organising principle for how work is conceived and executed.16,21 Microsoft’s leadership has repeatedly argued that the meaningful unit of analysis is not the model in isolation, but the interplay between AI systems and the tacit knowledge of employees, operating within redesigned workflows.1,7,16 In practical terms, this means treating AI not as a product line or innovation project, but as a new production function that reshapes how the firm creates, delivers, and captures value across all its businesses.2
That production function reframing matters because it changes the questions executives must ask. Rather than focusing on whether their organisation has adopted a particular model or platform, they must interrogate how AI is altering the organisation’s cost structure, its speed of learning, and its ability to coordinate complex activities. Nadella has described an internal shift at Microsoft in precisely these terms: reorganising teams, reassigning senior leadership roles, and funding mechanisms so that AI capability becomes the axis around which product and commercial decisions turn.2,21 The firm ceases to be a static entity deploying technology at the edges, and instead becomes a dynamic learning system whose architecture is inseparable from its AI capital.
Tacit Knowledge, AI Capital, and the Learning Loop
A core tension driving contemporary AI strategy is the relationship between tacit human knowledge and formalised machine knowledge. Much of what makes organisations effective resides in tacit practices: unspoken rules, heuristics, micro-coordination habits, and context-sensitive judgement that never makes it into manuals or databases. Nadella’s conversations with Reid Hoffman highlight that the future of work depends on capturing this tacit knowledge through continuous interplay between humans and AI systems, rather than attempting to replace human judgement outright.1,7 The strategic prize is to turn that interplay into a compounding asset: AI capital.
AI capital can be thought of as the set of models, agents, and embedded systems that are trained not only on generic web-scale data, but on a firm’s proprietary workflows, decisions, customer interactions, and institutional memory.10 Whereas traditional capital is booked on balance sheets as plant, equipment, or financial assets, AI capital is intangible but economically potent. It manifests in copilots that understand unique internal processes, recommendation systems tuned to the firm’s segmentation logic, and decision-support tools that reflect the organisation’s historical trade-offs.7,14 This capital does not exist in isolation; it is generated and refined inside a learning loop in which human actions create data, AI systems learn from that data, and updated AI behaviours in turn reshape human decisions.
Strategically, the learning loop becomes the site of defensibility. Nadella has argued that the truly valuable asset is not ownership of a particular frontier model, but ownership of a learning loop that sits above the model layer.10,19 If a firm can swap the underlying AI model-moving from one provider to another-without losing its embedded expertise, then its advantage lies in the way it has structured data, context, and workflows, not in its dependency on any single vendor.10 Conversely, if changing models destroys the firm’s competitive edge, what it owns is a fragile dependency, not a durable asset. This distinction is critical for firms navigating an ecosystem where model providers, cloud platforms, and AI startups compete to become indispensable.
Token Capital and the Risk of Hollowed-Out Firms
Nadella’s broader warning concerns the risk that AI replicates some of the damaging dynamics of early globalisation, hollowing out industries by centralising high-value capabilities while commoditising human expertise at the periphery.10,19 In that scenario, large AI platforms accumulate disproportionate control over models and data, and firms become thin shells of distribution and compliance rather than sites of genuine expertise. To counter this, Nadella has introduced the notion of “token capital”: the AI capability a company builds and owns, based explicitly on its distinctive knowledge, workflows, and context.10
Token capital reframes AI not as a generic service consumed from external providers, but as an asset rooted in the firm’s internal learning loop. It is “inside” that loop rather than supplied from outside.10 The logic is that by investing in AI systems that are trained on, and co-evolve with, their own decision-making, firms retain strategic control. They can leverage frontier models and cloud-scale compute, but the integrated capability-the tokens representing the firm’s expertise as encoded in AI-is theirs. This addresses the concern that industries could be hollowed out, as happened when manufacturing was offshored and supply chains reconfigured, leaving local firms stripped of core competencies.19 Where globalisation hollowed out physical production capacity, platform-dominated AI could hollow out cognitive and organisational capacity unless firms deliberately build token capital.
Critically, this vision rejects a fatalistic view of AI as an external force that inevitably erodes firms’ roles. Instead, it positions firms as the primary actors responsible for deciding whether AI is used to strip out expertise or compound it. Nadella’s language around needing “social permission” for AI investment underscores that this is not only a competitive concern but a legitimacy one: firms must show that AI-driven productivity gains translate into broad economic growth and better outcomes for workers, not merely margin expansion.1,5,23 Token capital is thus both a strategic hedge against dependency and part of an implicit social contract about how AI should be deployed inside institutions.
Redefining the Production Function of the Firm
Economists traditionally model the firm’s output as a function of capital and labour. In a simple representation, one might write output as Y = F(K, L), where K is capital and L is labour. Nadella’s framing hints at a more complex production function in which AI capital is an explicit factor, and where the interaction term between human and AI capabilities becomes central. A more fitting conceptual form is Y = F(K, L, A, L \times A), where A represents AI capital and L \times A captures the complementarity between human labour and AI systems.
The important point is not the algebra but the strategic intuition: productivity gains arise disproportionately when human judgement and AI capabilities are combined in well-designed workflows, rather than when either is deployed in isolation.7,12,22 This is consistent with empirical analyses of AI-exposed roles, which show that the new tasks associated with AI adoption are more likely to rely on skills like empathy, creativity, and judgement.9 As AI absorbs routine work, human labour shifts towards higher-value activities that depend on nuanced interpretation and leadership. The firm’s production function thus changes qualitatively: it becomes less about scaling repetitive execution and more about scaling the rate and quality of learning from complex, data-rich situations.
In practice, this demands a redesign of organisational structures. Microsoft’s internal changes-realigning senior leadership, concentrating authority around AI-centric teams, and reworking funding models-reflect a broader trend in which firms treat AI as a platform for all business units.2,21 Product managers, sales leaders, and operations executives must work with AI engineers to co-author workflows, rather than treating them as downstream implementers. The result is a more horizontal, networked firm in which AI tools sit in the middle of processes, orchestrating information flows, rather than at the edges performing isolated analytics.
Democratising AI While Avoiding Platform Capture
There is a second tension embedded in Nadella’s statement: the need to democratise AI access while avoiding a future in which a handful of giants “eat the economy” by controlling critical models and infrastructure.1,4,8,23 On the one hand, Microsoft itself is a major player in frontier AI and cloud computing. On the other, Nadella has argued for a reset that prioritises lower-cost models, genuine user choice, and strong data control.4,1 The underlying concern is that if only a few providers can deliver economically viable AI capabilities at scale, firms will lack meaningful autonomy and will struggle to build their own token capital.
To prevent such concentration, Nadella promotes an ecosystem view. Frontier models should be one layer in a stack that includes open-source models, domain-specific systems, and customer-owned data contexts.4,16 Firms need the ability to mix and match components, switching models as costs, performance, and regulatory requirements change. This aligns with the earlier argument about swapping models without losing expertise: technical modularity is a precondition for strategic sovereignty. If the firm’s learning loop is tightly coupled to a single provider’s idiosyncrasies, then any shift in licensing, pricing, or governance can destabilise its core operations.
Critics might argue that calls for democratisation from dominant incumbents are self-serving or insufficiently radical. Some observers point out that large platforms still capture most of the margin from AI services, leaving smaller firms competing in lower-value layers of the stack.19 Yet the more interesting strategic question is how firms can position themselves so that, regardless of which platform wins the AI arms race, their own ability to compound learning remains intact. Nadella’s focus on data control, workflow design, and model interchangeability is an attempt to answer that question for Microsoft’s customers, but the principles apply more generally across industries.4,16,21
Work, Skills, and the Recomposition of the Firm’s Human Capital
Shifting the firm’s future onto AI raises profound questions about work and skills. AI has already begun to transform roles by automating repetitive, data-heavy tasks and augmenting decision-making across functions from finance to marketing.3,6,15,18 Nadella consistently rejects simplistic narratives of mass job destruction, instead emphasising a recomposition of work in which AI takes the toil out of tasks and allows professionals to focus on complex problem-solving and creativity.1,12,22 This is backed by labour market analyses showing that AI-exposed roles are adding tasks that rely 2,5 times more on human-centred skills such as empathy and leadership.9
However, this recomposition is neither automatic nor painless. It requires firms to invest heavily in upskilling, redesign job architecture, and create environments where employees can safely experiment with AI tools.12,22 Nadella’s insistence on “social permission” reflects the need to convince workers and societies that AI-driven productivity will translate into wage and job growth rather than a pure extraction of value.1,5,9 Many leading companies exposed to AI have indeed raised wages and increased headcount faster than peers, suggesting that, when implemented thoughtfully, AI can support a more generous employment model.9 Yet there is no guarantee that all firms will follow this path; some may use AI primarily for cost-cutting, fuelling backlash and regulatory scrutiny.
Inside the firm, the future role of managers changes markedly. They become stewards of learning loops, responsible for curating data quality, overseeing the ethical use of AI, and integrating machine recommendations into human decision processes. They also become educators, guiding teams through new tools and helping them translate AI outputs into actionable strategies. Professional identities grow more fluid, as employees move between roles that combine domain expertise, data literacy, and AI collaboration.6,18,22 The firm of the future is thus not only AI-enabled but AI-literate, with human capital reoriented around partnership with machines.
Debates, Objections, and Alternative Visions
There are several objections to the idea that AI defines the future of the firm rather than being “just” a technology. One critique holds that this framing risks overstating AI’s maturity and underplaying other forces such as sustainability, geopolitics, and demographic change. From this perspective, AI is a powerful tool but not an organising principle; the firm remains fundamentally about human relationships, brand trust, and physical assets. Another concern is that elevating AI to a defining role may encourage overinvestment in speculative capabilities while basic digital hygiene and customer-centric practices are neglected.
Nadella’s own public comments attempt to balance some of these concerns by repeatedly emphasising mission, culture, and social trust as prerequisites for successful AI deployment.5,21 He has argued that strategy emerges from mission and culture, not the other way round, and that AI should serve these deeper commitments rather than replace them.5 Furthermore, his warnings about the concentration of AI power and the risk of hollowed-out industries suggest a sceptical stance towards any naïve techno-optimism.1,19 He acknowledges that the future of the firm depends on political and social permission, not just technical capability.1,23
Alternative visions of the firm’s future include more decentralised, human-centric models in which AI is deliberately constrained to narrow domains, and organisational value is defined by care, craftsmanship, or community rather than scale and productivity. These views may resonate strongly in sectors such as education, healthcare, and arts. Even here, however, AI can play a role in information management, diagnostics support, or personalised experiences, raising the question of whether any large-scale firm can fully abstain from AI capital without gradually eroding its competitiveness.3,15,18 The debate is therefore less about whether AI matters, and more about how far it should penetrate organisational design and identity.
Why the Future of the Firm Hinges on AI-Enabled Learning
The central message behind Nadella’s framing is that firms are becoming learning organisms in a world saturated with data, uncertainty, and rapid technological change. AI is the connective tissue that enables them to sense, interpret, and act at the speed and scale required to remain relevant.1,7,16 When that capability is built on a robust learning loop, protected from platform over-dependence, and aligned with human skill development, it can generate long-term economic value and social legitimacy. When it is neglected, outsourced without strategic control, or used primarily as an extraction tool, it risks hollowing out the very expertise that justifies the firm’s existence.
In that sense, the debate is not about whether AI counts as “technology” in a narrow engineering sense. It is about whether leaders are willing to treat AI as the structural mechanism through which the firm defines its role, its assets, and its responsibilities in an increasingly algorithmic economy. Nadella’s interventions-in interviews, essays, and strategic moves inside Microsoft-represent one of the most explicit attempts by a major corporate leader to push AI out of the IT basement and into the core of organisational theory and practice.1,2,5,7,21 Whether other firms follow this path, adapt it, or resist it will determine not only their competitive trajectories but the texture of work and economic opportunity in the coming decades.
References
1. Satya Nadella: AI Is the Future of the Firm – YouTube – 2026-06-05 – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BKx0Dp8y-6g
2. Microsoft’s Satya Nadella: We Can’t Let AI Giants Eat the Economy – 2026-06-22 – https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/microsofts-satya-nadella-we-cant-let-ai-giants-eat-the-economy-b9d33b9f
3. Inside Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella’s AI Revolution – 2025-12-17 – https://www.businessinsider.com/microsoft-ceo-satya-nadella-ai-revolution-2025-12
4. The Future of AI in Business: Impact and Trends for 2026 – https://www.oakwoodinternational.com/blog/future-of-ai-in-business
5. Microsoft’s Satya Nadella calls for AI reset beyond frontier model … – 2026-06-22 – https://seekingalpha.com/news/4605322-microsoft-s-satya-nadella-calls-for-ai-reset-beyond-frontier-model-race
6. AI, Ambition, and a $3 Trillion Vision: Satya Nadella on Microsoft’s … – 2025-04-10 – https://www.madrona.com/satya-nadella-microsfot-ai-strategy-leadership-culture-computing/
7. How AI Is Changing Business Careers: The Future of Work – 2026-04-30 – https://www.rasmussen.edu/degrees/business/blog/how-ai-is-changing-business-careers/
8. Microsoft’s Satya Nadella: We Can’t Let AI Giants Eat the Economy – 2026-06-22 – https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/microsofts-satya-nadella-we-cant-let-ai-giants-eat-the-economy-b9d33b9f?eafs_enabled=false
9. AI Jobs Barometer – PwC – 2026-06-15 – https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/services/ai/ai-jobs-barometer.html
10. Nadella’s Brutal Warning “AI Is About to Hollow Out Entire Industries” – 2026-06-15 – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mczINsa2WX0
11. Satya Nadella – Microsoft Source – 2026-02-11 – https://news.microsoft.com/source/exec/satya-nadella/
12. How Companies Can Prepare for an AI-First Future | BCG – 2025-06-19 – https://www.bcg.com/publications/2025/how-companies-can-prepare-for-ai-first-future
13. #TechToday | ‘Future of the firm is the ability to…’: Microsoft’s Satya … – 2026-06-14 – https://www.facebook.com/BusinessToday/posts/techtoday-future-of-the-firm-is-the-ability-to-microsofts-satya-nadella-message-/1481986237309083/
14. Satya Nadella on AI’s Business Revolution – YouTube – 2026-01-21 – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nCbHsCG334
15. How AI is shaping the future of business – Dassault Systèmes blog – 2024-09-03 – https://blog.3ds.com/topics/company-news/how-ai-is-shaping-the-future-of-business/
16. Microsoft CEO Nadella on How AI Can Change Workflows – YouTube – 2026-01-20 – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XDBLWU1kcCo
17. Satya Nadella (@satyanadella) / Posts / X – Twitter – 2026-06-24 – https://x.com/satyanadella?lang=en
18. What’s the Future of AI in Business? – Professional & Executive … – 2023-10-20 – https://professional.dce.harvard.edu/blog/whats-the-future-of-ai-in-business/
19. Satya Nadella warns that AI could hollow out entire industries … – 2026-06-15 – https://venturebeat.com/technology/satya-nadella-warns-that-ai-could-hollow-out-entire-industries-echoing-the-damage-done-by-globalization
20. The Future of AI in Business – LinkedIn – 2024-09-06 – https://www.linkedin.com/top-content/technology/artificial-intelligence-in-business/the-future-of-ai-in-business/
21. Microsoft’s New Growth Era: Inside Satya Nadella’s AI Vision – 2025-10-28 – https://businesschief.com/news/microsofts-new-growth-era-inside-satya-nadellas-ai-vision
22. How AI is Reshaping the Future of Work – 2026-04-13 – https://www.gsb.stanford.edu/exec-ed/difference/how-ai-reshaping-future-work
23. Microsoft CEO has a warning about the AI race – Fox Business – 2026-06-22 – https://www.foxbusiness.com/technology/microsoft-ceo-has-warning-about-ai-race
24. Microsoft CEO Concerned AI Will Destroy the Entire Company – Reddit – 2025-09-20 – https://www.reddit.com/r/ArtificialInteligence/comments/1nm8vvy/microsoft_ceo_concerned_ai_will_destroy_the/
