The Ambiguity Advantage: When AI Becomes Your Most Honest (and Sometimes Too Polite) Manager
Ambiguity is not a rare managerial defect. It is Tuesday. A senior manager asks for a “highly effective” plan. A product team is told to “maximize adoption” without being told whether adoption means revenue, users, engagement, retention, or the investor’s favorite dashboard number this quarter. An operations team receives the instruction to review “all new and underperforming channels,” which may mean channels that are both new and underperforming, or all new channels plus all underperforming channels. Excellent. Everyone can now attend three meetings and pretend the sentence was clear. ...