The Hourglass Revolution: A Theoretical Framework of AI's Impact on Organizational Structures in Developed and Emerging Markets
It addresses organizational design challenges for businesses and policymakers, but is incremental as it builds on existing institutional and digital transformation theories.
The paper tackles how AI transforms organizational structures by introducing an 'hourglass' configuration, analyzing mechanisms like algorithmic coordination and structural fluidity that differ between developed and emerging markets.
This paper presents a theoretical framework examining how artificial intelligence (AI) transforms organizational structures, introducing an "hourglass" configuration that emerges as AI assumes traditional middle management functions. The analysis identifies three key mechanisms algorithmic coordination, structural fluidity, and hybrid agency that demonstrate how AI enables organizational forms transcending traditional structural boundaries. These mechanisms illustrate how AI enables new modes of organizing to go beyond existing structural boundaries. Drawing on institutional theory and digital transformation research, we examine how these mechanisms operate differently in developed and emerging markets, producing distinct patterns of structural transformation. Our framework offers three important theoretical contributions: (1) conceptualizing algorithmic coordination as a unique form of organizational integration, (2) explaining how structural fluidity allows organizations to achieve stability and adaptability at the same time, and (3) the theoretical argument that hybrid agency surpasses traditional, human centric forms of organizational capabilities. Our analysis shows that while the move to AI enabled strategies overall seems quite global, successful application will need to pay sufficient attention to the technological capabilities, cultural dimensions, and contexts of the market.