The AI tool operates at Level One. It transacts. It responds to prompts with outputs. It does not build relationship, does not create mutual trust, does not share risk or vulnerability. The human relationships within the team — between engineer and colleagues, manager and reports, leader and organization — must operate at Level Two if the team is to maintain the capacity for humble inquiry in the face of the tool's confident outputs.
This means that the most important investment an organization can make in AI adoption is not the tool itself. It is the relational infrastructure within which the tool is used. The meetings in which people feel safe enough to say they are unsure. The code reviews in which questioning AI output is expected. The one-on-one conversations in which a manager asks "What did you learn?" and genuinely wants to know.
Level Two relationships are not a soft skill. They are the hard foundation upon which the quality of AI-augmented work rests. And they are the foundation that most organizations, in their rush to deploy tools and measure artifacts, have neglected to build. The relationships cannot be mandated, scheduled into quarterly reviews, or produced through team-building exercises. They are built through sustained attention to the person rather than to the role, and the building takes time.
Schein connected Level Two relationships to his broader argument about psychological safety. The safety that permits vulnerable admissions — "I don't know," "I can't evaluate this," "I'm struggling" — is built through Level Two relationships over time. Level One relationships cannot sustain it because the transactional framing treats vulnerability as weakness rather than as the condition of learning.
The three levels of relationship were articulated in Schein's Humble Inquiry (2013) and elaborated in Humble Consulting (2016). The framework synthesized decades of observation about why some consultant-client relationships produced genuine change while others produced only superficial compliance. The distinguishing factor was almost always the depth of the relationship, and Schein's three levels named the depths with clinical precision.
Level One is transactional. It suffices for exchange but not for learning — and the AI transition requires learning.
Level Two is personal but professional. Genuine mutual interest, willingness to be known, commitment to understanding — the relational foundation for vulnerable admissions.
Level Three is friendship. Not required for organizational learning, and not always appropriate in professional contexts.
AI tools operate at Level One only. They cannot build relationship, share risk, or create the conditions of mutual trust.
Level Two is the minimum infrastructure. The quality of AI-augmented work depends on relationships the tool cannot provide.