There’s a quiet trade-off happening inside high-growth companies right now.
We’re moving faster than ever, and teams are more efficient. AI is handling work that used to take hours, and asynchronous communication means decisions don’t have to wait for meetings. On paper, it’s all an upside.
But underneath the speed, something else is happening. Leaders are moving further away from their teams.
Not intentionally and not dramatically—just gradually enough that you don’t notice it until alignment shifts: decisions that need to be revisited, priorities that aren’t as clear as you thought, or challenges surfacing later than they used to.
The assumption that new tools and smarter systems will keep everyone connected is often not the reality. The more we rely on async updates and AI-generated summaries, the easier it becomes to mistake visibility for connection. And those are not the same thing.
Visibility shows you what’s getting done. Connection is formed in conversation, context, and the small, human moments where people feel seen, not just managed.
As a CEO leading a company of more than 100 people, this is something I’ve had to be very deliberate about. The bigger we get, the easier it can be to rely on reports and systems to stay informed. But I’ve found that if you want to keep trust and alignment strong as you scale, you have to design for connection just as intentionally as you design for growth.
One of the biggest mistakes I see is treating connection as something you “fit in” when there’s time—and there is never time.
If it’s not built into how your company operates, it won’t happen consistently enough to make a difference. That’s why I’ve made regular one-on-one meetings and structured cross-team conversations a nonnegotiable part of how I lead. Beyond my direct reports, I intentionally create regular touchpoints across the organization so leadership doesn’t drift too far from the day-to-day reality of the team.
That doesn’t mean constant meetings or unnecessary check-ins. It means creating an environment and culture where people know they will have direct access, and where leaders are in touch enough to know what’s actually happening on the ground.
When those conversations are structured and recurring, they stop feeling like interruptions and start functioning as infrastructure.
Many leaders underestimate how quickly alignment can drift, especially in fast-moving environments. When you’re spinning out new products on a two-week cadence, small gaps become large quickly.
I learned this the hard way. Strong documents and asynchronous updates kept everyone informed, but not always aligned. Teams would move quickly, only to later realize that they were operating from slightly different interpretations of priorities and timelines, creating rework that slowed everyone down. That’s where real working sessions became crucial. Not status meetings, but collaborative discussions where teams could challenge assumptions and align on decisions in real time before small disconnects became larger operational problems.
It’s a small investment, but it’s what keeps speed from turning into misalignment.
What used to only require proximity now requires intention. If your primary communication is happening through written updates or AI transcripts, you’re getting the “what” but often missing the “why” and the “how it feels.”
The goal here is to reduce the distance between what you think is happening and what’s actually happening. Connection shouldn’t live outside the system. It should be part of it. It could show up as regular cross-functional conversations, leadership visibility across teams, or simply making sure that spending time with people isn’t the first thing to get cut when things get busy.
You can’t scale connections passively. You have to actively protect it.
Artificial intelligence can be an incredible tool—it makes teams faster, sharper, and more capable. But, it won’t tell you when someone is losing confidence, when a team is quietly stuck, or when a small issue is about to become a bigger one.
As companies scale, the job of a leader isn’t just to drive outcomes. It’s to maintain the clarity and trust that make those outcomes possible in the first place.
You have to decide that staying close to your team is part of the job, not something that happens once everything else is done.
Because if you wait for that moment, it never comes.