Monday, April 20, 2026

Part 5: Approval Is Dead. Long Live AI Design

By now, the pattern isn’t theoretical anymore. After the first 4 posts where  In Part 1, control didn’t vanish, it slipped then In Part 2, permission didn’t get revoked, it became unnecessary then In Part 3, design replaced oversight and finally In Part 4, data stopped supporting decisions and started defining reality.

So it’s tempting to believe the next step is operational. More guardrails. Better dashboards. Tighter governance. Really, It isn’t.

The next step is cultural. And it’s the one most organizations quietly avoid. Because the hardest thing to remove from a business isn’t bad technology. It’s approval.

Approval culture feels responsible. It signals diligence, accountability, control. Decisions are reviewed, escalated, signed off. Risk is “managed” because multiple humans have touched the outcome. But in an autonomous enterprise, approval doesn’t do what leaders think it does. It doesn’t reduce risk. It redistributes it.

When AI systems are making thousands, sometimes millions, of decisions, approval cannot scale in the way organizations are structured to believe it can. So what happens instead is subtle.

Approvals become selective. Selective becomes symbolic. Symbolic becomes irrelevant.

And yet, the structure remains.

Dashboards still route “exceptions” to humans. Committees still exist. Escalation paths still get documented. But the actual system, the one driving outcomes, has already moved past them.

This creates a dangerous middle state. The system acts. The organization believes it approves. And no one is fully accountable for the gap in between.

Leaders rarely confront this directly because the alternative is uncomfortable. Killing approval culture doesn’t mean removing humans from decisions entirely. It means admitting that humans are no longer the point of control in the way they used to be.

And that forces trade-offs most organizations aren’t ready to make.

The first trade-off is between speed and reassurance.

Approval provides psychological safety. Someone looked at it. Someone signed off. Even if that review adds little value, it creates a sense of control. But autonomous systems optimize for speed by design. Every approval layer is friction. And friction, at scale, doesn’t just slow decisions. It changes which decisions get made at all. So leaders are forced to choose:
Do we prioritize fast, system-driven outcomes?
Or slower, human-validated ones that may no longer keep up with the business? Trying to do both is where things break.

The second trade-off is between accountability and ownership.

In an approval culture, accountability is distributed. If something goes wrong, responsibility can be traced through a chain of decisions. But in an autonomous system, decisions aren’t made by a chain. They are made by a design. Which means when something fails, the question isn’t “Who approved this?” It’s “Who designed the system to behave this way?”

That’s a much harder question to answer. And a much harder one to own. Because it shifts accountability from operational teams to leadership decisions about constraints, incentives, and acceptable trade-offs.

The third trade-off is the one most organizations avoid entirely: control vs. intent.

Approval gives the illusion of control over individual decisions. Design enforces intent across all decisions. You can’t maximize both. If every decision requires approval, you are optimizing for control at the expense of scale. If decisions are autonomous within constraints, you are optimizing for intent, but giving up visibility into each individual action.

Most organizations try to sit in the middle. They keep approval structures in place while systems quietly route around them.

And that’s where risk compounds.

A global retail banking institution faced this tension as it expanded its AI-driven fraud detection system.

Initially, the system flagged suspicious transactions for human review. Analysts would approve or decline actions, freeze accounts, or escalate cases. It was a classic approval model. As transaction volumes grew, the system became more accurate. False positives dropped. Detection speed improved. So the bank introduced automated actions for “high-confidence” fraud signals.

Accounts could be temporarily frozen without human approval. On paper, this was a controlled step toward efficiency. In practice, it created a fracture. The system handled the majority of cases autonomously. Humans reviewed a shrinking subset of edge cases. But the approval structure remained unchanged.

When issues emerged, they weren’t obvious failures.

Customers with legitimate transactions were occasionally locked out of accounts during critical moments, travel, emergencies, high-value purchases. Each case, individually, looked like a reasonable false positive.

But collectively, they created reputational friction.

Customer trust eroded not because the system was inaccurate, but because the organization hadn’t fully let go of approval thinking. They were still asking: “Was this decision correct?” Instead of: “Did we design the right consequences for being wrong?”

The resolution didn’t involve rolling back automation. It required eliminating the illusion of approval. The bank made three critical shifts.

They stopped treating human review as a safety net for individual decisions and instead redesigned consequence management. Instead of simply freezing accounts, the system introduced graded responses: transaction delays, step-up authentication, contextual alerts.

They reframed accountability. Product and risk leaders were no longer responsible for approving edge cases. They were responsible for defining acceptable error trade-offs: how many false positives were tolerable, in what contexts, and with what customer impact.

And most importantly, they redesigned feedback loops around customer experience, not just fraud detection accuracy. The system wasn’t just evaluated on catching fraud, but on how it behaved when it was wrong.

What changed wasn’t the system’s intelligence.

It was the organization’s willingness to stop pretending it was still approving decisions.

This is the real shift in Part 5. Approval culture isn’t just inefficient in an autonomous enterprise. It’s misleading. It tells leaders they are in control of decisions they no longer directly shape. It tells teams they are accountable for outcomes they don’t fully influence. It tells organizations they are managing risk when they are often just delaying it.

Killing approval culture doesn’t mean removing human judgment. It means relocating it.

From the moment of decision… to the design of the system.

From approving actions… to defining boundaries.

From reviewing outcomes… to owning consequences.

Because in the end, autonomous systems don’t need permission. They need clarity.

Clarity about what matters.
Clarity about what’s acceptable.
Clarity about what should never happen, even if the data suggests it might work.

And that clarity doesn’t come from another approval layer. It comes from leaders willing to make the trade-offs they’ve been avoiding all along.

#AI #AutonomousEnterprise #Leadership #DigitalTransformation #AIPlaybook #FutureOfWork #DecisionMaking

Hyderabad, Telangana, India
People call me aggressive, people think I am intimidating, People say that I am a hard nut to crack. But I guess people young or old do like hard nuts -- Isnt It? :-)