Recognizing invisible labor and displaced costs created when automating tasks, particularly the human attention required to manage AI systems.
Laozi taught that every action contains hidden consequences—what appears as a benefit creates shadow effects elsewhere. In automation, this manifests clearly: automating a customer service role appears to reduce costs, but creates new labor demands—someone must monitor the AI system, handle exceptions, manage customer complaints about poor automation, and continuously retrain the model. This shadow work often exceeds the original labor savings. The practice of automation frequently displaces costs rather than eliminating them, often shifting them toward workers with less power or visibility. The Taoist wisdom suggests transparency about these shadows before implementing automation. Map the full lifecycle of automated processes, including maintenance, monitoring, exception handling, and retraining. Include these costs in ROI calculations. More importantly, acknowledge the human displacement and plan thoughtfully—retraining, role transitions, or complementary job creation. Organizations following this principle automate more ethically and effectively because they plan for reality rather than the idealized automation fantasy. The paradox is that automating thoughtfully, with shadow work acknowledged, often produces better automation than pursuing maximum speed.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.