CONCEPT
Untested Organizational Restructuring
Organizational forms — vector pods, aggressive headcount reduction, integrator-based team structures — adopted at speed during the AI boom but <em>never stress-tested</em> by adversity.
Untested organizational restructuring is the Opus 4.6 simulation's name for a specific mechanism through which the AI boom is generating systemic fragility. Organizations across the economy are adopting new structures at the speed of competitive necessity — vector pods, aggressive headcount reduction, integrator-based teams, AI-native workflows — whose performance under adversity is unknown because adversity has not arrived. The structures function brilliantly during the boom because the boom provides the conditions they were designed for. Whether they survive tool degradation, capability plateaus, economic contractions, or regulatory disruption is an open question, and the question's openness is itself the fragility. Minsky observed the same dynamic in financial institutions before 2008: new organizational structures produced superior returns during the boom and were adopted widely, and failed in ways their designers had not anticipated when the boom's conditions changed.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The concept applies Minsky's structural analysis to organizational design. The financial institutions before 2008 had adopted structures — independent trading desks, quantitative risk management, originate-to-distribute lending — that produced