I Have Some Questions...
What if leadership wasn’t about having the answers—but about asking better questions?
On "I Have Some Questions…", Erik Berglund – a founder, coach, and Speechcraft evangelist – dives into the conversations that high performers aren’t having enough. This isn’t your typical leadership podcast. It’s a tactical deep-dive into the soft skills that actually drive results: the hard-to-nail moments of accountability, the awkward feedback loops, and the language that turns good leaders into great ones.
Each week, Erik explores a question that has shaped his own journey. Expect raw, unpolished curiosity. Expect conversations with bold thinkers, rising leaders, and practitioners who are tired of recycled advice and ready to talk about what really works. Expect episodes that get under the hood of how real change happens: through what we say, how we say it, and how often we practice it.
This show is for driven managers, emerging execs, and anyone who knows that real growth comes from curiosity rather than charisma.
Subscribe if you’re ready to stop winging it and start leading with intention.
I Have Some Questions...
058: How To Deal With The Looming Talent Glut
In this thought-provoking solo episode, Erik unpacks a major second-order consequence of AI: the collapse of the entry-level talent pipeline. As AI increasingly absorbs the "grunt work" across industries, we risk losing the slow, steady process by which professionals build context, mastery, and leadership skills. This looming talent glut isn't just about job displacement—it's about long-term strategic gaps in leadership. Erik calls on leaders to start planning now for a future where developing and redeploying human potential will be more critical—and more difficult—than ever.
❓ The Big Question
What happens to leadership pipelines when AI eliminates the work that used to train future leaders?
💡 Key Takeaways
- The traditional path to strategic leadership—starting with menial tasks—will be disrupted by AI automation.
- AI will fulfill entry-level functions across industries, eliminating key opportunities for experiential learning.
- This shift creates a second-order problem: a future shortage of strategic talent with real-world context.
- Most companies don’t have systems in place to develop internal talent and rely on others to do it for them.
- If we don’t build better systems for training and redeploying people, we’re heading toward a long-term leadership drought.
🧠 Concepts, Curves, and Frameworks
- Osmotic Learning: The slow, immersive absorption of context through repeated exposure to low-stakes work.
- First-Order vs. Second-Order Problems: First is job displacement; second is the absence of future-ready talent.
- Fractional Expertise Model: A potential solution where skilled professionals port across industries for high-leverage work.
- AI-Augmented Training: Tech like VR/AR simulations or AI roleplay can accelerate skill development in the absence of traditional paths.
- Talent Reliance Matrix: If your company relies on others to train your future hires, you’re especially vulnerable to this shift.
🔁 Real-Life Reflections
- Erik highlights how most strategic contributors today were shaped by years of “doing the work” in junior roles.
- He cautions leaders who celebrate efficiency gains without considering the downstream costs to their talent pipeline.
- Companies that depend on poaching talent rather than developing it are particularly exposed.
🧰 Put This Into Practice
- Ask yourself: Does our company actually develop talent—or do we rely on others to do it for us?
- Begin documenting what osmosis-based learning used to look like in your org. How could you simulate that now?
- Experiment with AI tools and simulations (like roleplay or VR) for real-time, skills-based learning.
- Think ahead: what roles might disappear in your industry, and what strategic consequences will follow?
- If you're a leader, start networking with others who are wrestling with the same questions. The answers won’t come solo.
🗣️ Favorite Quotes
“We’re about to lose the mechanism by which people become qualified to lead.”
“The second-order problem isn’t job loss—it’s the collapse of strategic thinking capacity five years from now.”
“If you kill the entry-level rung, you don’t just save money—you stall the ladder.”
“Most companies don’t build leaders. They just hope to hire ones someone else trained.”
“AI is changing the value stream—and we’re not ready for what comes next.”