Digital Transformation Why AI Needs Leadership

From n Ben Schulz, Vorstand, Consultant & Coach, Ben Schulz & Partner AG | Translated by AI 3 min Reading Time

Related Vendors

For all its technological capabilities, one clear realization remains: AI does not lead people. Leadership remains a deeply human task. It arises through attitude, guidance, and responsibility. AI provides probabilities; leadership makes decisions. This distinction is crucial. Especially in SMEs, it determines the acceptance, trust, and effectiveness of new technologies.

By using AI, leaders gain time for development discussions, perspective work, and personal mentoring. This human and personal attention signals appreciation to employees and opens up future opportunities.(Image:   Md - stock.adobe.com)
By using AI, leaders gain time for development discussions, perspective work, and personal mentoring. This human and personal attention signals appreciation to employees and opens up future opportunities.
(Image: Md - stock.adobe.com)

In electrical engineering and automation, AI can be a powerful co-pilot. It relieves executives from routines, data preparation, and complex scenario calculations. Predictive maintenance, intelligent production planning, or automatic quality analyses create efficiency gains. At the same time, this generates valuable space for dialogue, relationships, and genuine leadership. Those who use AI correctly gain time for conversations, feedback, and conveying meaning. This is where trust is built, and hope grows. Especially in highly automated environments, personal leadership is crucial to avoid losing employees. Technology can control processes— but connection arises only through human interaction.

Leadership in the AI era requires attitude

Technological competence alone does not make a leader. What matters is the inner attitude. Leaders must provide orientation as systems become more complex. They must convey security as uncertainty increases. Automated decisions raise questions: Who is liable? Who takes responsibility for results? Who explains them? Hope & Trust Leadership precisely describes the necessary mindset. Hope means actively shaping the future. It represents confidence through the ability to act and avoids sugarcoating. Trust is the foundation of any collaboration. It is built through transparency, reliability, and clear decisions. In technical organizations, this combination is particularly important. High complexity demands clear leadership—not distance.

Strengthen Trust with Proper Use

AI competence is becoming a leadership task. Not to master technology in detail, but to take responsibility. Three interconnections are crucial in this regard. Transparency creates trust. Data-driven decisions must be comprehensible. Leadership explains how results are generated and what assumptions underpin them. Employees understand the connections and feel included. Relief creates hope. Automation reduces overload. Leaders gain time for development discussions, perspective work, and personal support. This signals appreciation and opens up future opportunities. And: Ethics create security. Clear guidelines for the use of AI prevent loss of control. Responsibility remains with humans. This provides orientation and trust, especially in safety-critical areas of electrical engineering.

Leadership Skills in the Interplay of AI and Hope & Trust

Effective leadership in the AI era combines technical understanding with human strength. Judgment replaces blind faith in technology. Relationship building takes the place of pure control logic. Decisiveness becomes more important than delegating to algorithms. Especially in automated production environments, leaders are needed who are present, listen, and enable development. AI supports leadership. It does not replace responsibility. Those who hide behind systems lose trust. Those who visibly take responsibility gain credibility.

From AI Maturity to Leadership Maturity

Many organizations are currently discussing their AI maturity. How well do we understand the technology? How consistently do we apply it? How deeply is it integrated? These questions are important. But they fall short. What is crucial is the addition of a leadership dimension. The path progresses through four stages:

  • Understanding AI
  • Applying AI
  • Integrating AI
  • Transforming leadership

The fourth stage is decisive. Only when hope and trust are systematically strengthened does AI unfold its strategic benefits. Without cultural maturity, technological maturity remains ineffective.

Conclusion: AI is a Tool, Leadership, Attitude.

AI changes leadership, but it does not redefine it. Leadership remains human. It thrives on hope, trust, and clear responsibility. Companies in the electrical engineering and automation sectors that combine AI with Hope & Trust Leadership create stability in uncertain times. They strengthen commitment, performance, and future viability. Technology can optimize processes. Attitude shapes culture. Those who combine both lead not only efficiently but effectively. AI is a tool. Leadership is attitude.

About the author

Ben Schulz, Executive Board Member, Consultant, and Coach, Ben Schulz & Partner AG
(Image:Uwe Klössing)

As a sparring partner, Ben Schulz supports entrepreneurs of small and medium-sized businesses. His range of topics includes developing and implementing mission statements, strategy development, and leadership development. The Spiegel bestselling author brings knowledge from over two decades of entrepreneurship and business consulting.

Subscribe to the newsletter now

Don't Miss out on Our Best Content

By clicking on „Subscribe to Newsletter“ I agree to the processing and use of my data according to the consent form (please expand for details) and accept the Terms of Use. For more information, please see our Privacy Policy. The consent declaration relates, among other things, to the sending of editorial newsletters by email and to data matching for marketing purposes with selected advertising partners (e.g., LinkedIn, Google, Meta)

Unfold for details of your consent