From Labor to Leverage
I've been thinking about a quiet but important shift happening in how capital is being deployed.
A lot of money that used to be paid to people to build and operate systems is now being paid to build the machines and infrastructure that will eventually do the work themselves. We're seeing capital move from software labor to compute, data centers, robotics, automation, and AI infrastructure. In simple terms, the spend is shifting from headcount to capability.
What This Means for Businesses
First, efficiency will no longer be optional. Businesses that rely heavily on manual processes or large teams for repeatable work will feel pressure on margins, speed, and competitiveness.
Second, infrastructure choices will matter more than hiring plans. The question won't be "How many people do we need?" It will be "What systems can we put in place so fewer people are needed to scale?"
Third, companies that own or deeply integrate automation will grow at a faster rate. Not because they have more talent, but because they have more leverage.
People Still Matter, Differently
This doesn't mean people stop mattering. It means people matter most where judgment, strategy, creativity, and trust are required. Not where repetition lives.
The competitive edge is quietly shifting from labor to leverage.
2026 will reward businesses that invest early in scalable systems, redesign workflows around automation, and rethink growth beyond just adding more people.
Written by
Tolu Adetuyi