Informed i’s Weekly Business Insights
Extractive summaries and key takeaways from the articles carefully curated from TOP TEN BUSINESS MAGAZINES to promote informed business decision-making | Since 2017 | Week 441, covering February 20-26 , 2026. | Archive

The State of Organizations 2026: Three tectonic forces that are reshaping organizations
3 key takeaways from the article
- These are challenging times for organizations everywhere. Continuous disruption is in the air, with forces ranging from artificial intelligence, economic uncertainty, and geopolitical fragmentation to evolving workforce expectations, increasing customer demands, and tougher competitive dynamics redefining how leaders create value and sustain performance.
- According to the research three tectonic forces are reshaping organizations and will continue to define their success in the years ahead.The first force is the infusion of technology as automation and data analytics are joined by the burgeoning of AI, both the large language models underpinning generative AI and the advent of AI agents that can be inserted into company workflows. The second tectonic force is characterized by the economic disruptions and geopolitical uncertainty that are intensifying as the world becomes more fragmented. The third tectonic force stems from workforce shifts. Evolving employee expectations, shifting demographics, and new tech-driven working models are transforming the workforce.
- The research suggests that these forces are not temporary fluctuations but deep structural transformations that will test how organizations grow, operate, and lead. They are interdependent: AI could liberate organizations from some of the physical location and geopolitical constraints associated with human workers, but it will raise other dimensions of complexity, including how humans and AI agents will collaborate.
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Topics: Tectonic forces that are reshaping organizations, Workforce Shifts. Geopolitical Fragmentation
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These are challenging times for organizations everywhere. Continuous disruption is in the air, with forces ranging from artificial intelligence, economic uncertainty, and geopolitical fragmentation to evolving workforce expectations, increasing customer demands, and tougher competitive dynamics redefining how leaders create value and sustain performance.
This report, the second edition of McKinsey’s State of Organizations research initiative, seeks to help leaders better understand these dynamics and address them effectively. The survey responses inform our conviction that three tectonic forces are reshaping organizations and will continue to define their success in the years ahead.
The first force is the infusion of technology as automation and data analytics are joined by the burgeoning of AI, both the large language models underpinning generative AI and the advent of AI agents that can be inserted into company workflows. Collectively, these technologies amount to a paradigm shift that promises significant benefits, including productivity gains, faster speed to market, and cost reductions. They are leading organizations to reimagine how work gets done, redefine domains and end-to-end processes, and rethink traditional structures. To harness AI’s potential, organizations need to embrace transformative dynamics, seize emerging opportunities—and test, test, test.
The second tectonic force is characterized by the economic disruptions and geopolitical uncertainty that are intensifying as the world becomes more fragmented. To thrive in this evolving landscape, organizations need to adapt swiftly yet sustainably to cope with increasing complexity and potentially rethink their location strategies.
The third tectonic force stems from workforce shifts. Evolving employee expectations, shifting demographics, and new techdriven working models are transforming the workforce. To remain competitive, organizations need to transcend traditional structures, redefine leadership, and refocus on performance to navigate ongoing disruption.
The research suggests that these forces are not temporary fluctuations but deep structural transformations that will test how organizations grow, operate, and lead. They are interdependent: AI could liberate organizations from some of the physical location and geopolitical constraints associated with human workers, but it will raise other dimensions of complexity, including how humans and AI agents will collaborate. Their impact is only beginning to unfold: Technology, particularly AI, will accelerate the reorganization of work and value creation; economic disruptions will keep redefining global resilience and competitiveness; and workforce shifts will challenge leadership models and talent systems in new ways.
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