PERSON
Patrick Lencioni
The organizational consultant who proved that team health is not soft—it is the load-bearing structure beneath every product, strategy, and technology, and the one thing AI cannot replace.
When a technology company in southern India handed twenty engineers a tool that multiplied their output twentyfold, it expected to learn something about software. What it learned instead was the state of its own relationships—exposed by the machine the way an X-ray exposes a fracture the patient has been walking on for years. Patrick Lencioni has spent a quarter century arguing that the single greatest advantage any organization can achieve is
organizational health, the condition in which a team’s leadership is cohesive, its people can be honest about what they know and fear, and its attention is fixed on collective results rather than individual metrics. What the Trivandrum experiment demonstrated, with the diagnostic precision of a controlled trial no consultant could have designed, is that
AI amplifies whatever signal a team feeds it: high-trust teams discovered new capabilities overnight, while low-trust teams found that the removal of execution
friction stripped away the last cover for their dysfunction. At the heart of his framework stands a five-layer