A few weeks back I sat through a corporate leadership training on “the four dimensions of digital leadership.” I went in expecting corporate fluff. I came out realizing something that has been nagging me ever since: the same moves the trainer taught for managing junior engineers are the same moves I keep needing to get an AI to actually understand me. Same pattern, same cost of getting it wrong, same fix.
I was thinking about it over my morning coffee this week: giving instructions to an AI feels exactly like onboarding a junior dev who joined yesterday. Sometimes one sentence lands. Sometimes I explain the same thing three times, slightly differently each time, and the output still comes back wrong. It’s not that the AI is stupid. It’s not that the junior dev is slow. It’s that I might not be a great communicator — and that gap is mine to close, not theirs.
The framework I learned is called Leadership 4.0. It has four dimensions: Freshmen Leader, Technology Leader, Social Leader, and Digital Leader. Used together, they help you diagnose whether the communication gap is on the sender’s side, the receiver’s side, or somewhere in the handoff. Here is how I now use them — at work with junior devs, and at home with my AI assistants.