Production-oriented definitions of purpose were adequate in the pre-AI era because the organization's identity was shaped by what it produced, and production was constrained by capability. The constraint served a double function: it limited what the organization could attempt, and it thereby defined what the organization was. 'We build backend systems' was not just a capability description but an identity statement that told the organization's members who they were.
When output becomes abundant, production-oriented definitions become tautologies. Every organization with access to AI tools can build software. The production that once defined the organization is now available to everyone, and a purpose available to everyone defines no one.
A judgment-oriented purpose does not define the organization by what it produces but by what it values, what it believes the world needs, and what it is uniquely positioned to contribute. The purpose becomes normative rather than descriptive: not 'we produce X' but 'we believe X matters, and we direct our amplified capability toward making X real.' This requires engagement with questions production-oriented purpose allowed organizations to avoid: What is genuinely valuable? What does the world actually need? And perhaps most important: what will we refuse to build, even though we can build it?
The communication of purpose in the AI age requires more deliberate and pervasive effort than in any previous organizational configuration. In the pre-AI organization, purpose was communicated partly through the structure of work itself — the backend engineer absorbed organizational purpose through the practice of her work. When role boundaries dissolve and work becomes fluid, implicit communication of purpose through work structure dissolves with it. Purpose must now be communicated explicitly, repeatedly, and through every channel the executive can reach.
Barnard articulated purpose as the third executive function in The Functions of the Executive (1938), where he placed it alongside maintaining communication and securing essential services as the core executive responsibilities.
The concept has acquired new urgency in the AI era as organizations confront the need to articulate purposes that can coordinate judgment when capability is abundant and any action is possible.
Constitutive, not instrumental. Purpose defines what the organization is and what its members become by participating — not merely coordinating action.
Production to judgment. Production-oriented purposes collapse when production becomes abundant; judgment-oriented purposes answer what is worth doing.
The refusal dimension. Morally serious purpose must answer what the organization will refuse to build even though it can.
Explicit communication. When work structure no longer carries implicit purpose, the executive must communicate purpose explicitly and repeatedly.
Embodiment over statement. Purpose is absorbed through observing how the executive's decisions embody purpose in concrete situations, not through reading mission statements.