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Horizontal Leadership: An Operating Model for the AI-Enabled Future

February 11, 2026 | Stephanie Neal

Leader talking to a team member, both sitting at a table

For decades, leadership development has followed a predictable path — reward high-performers with promotions and formal authority that flows down the organizational chart based on title and tenure. 

But as workplace realities and workforce priorities shift, that model is quickly becoming obsolete. Traditional corporate hierarchy is giving way to horizontal leadership, a new operating system in which influence comes from how people lead rather than from their title.

For HR leaders, this shift directly impacts succession planning, leadership readiness, culture, and execution. Who’s in charge? Who makes decisions? Who’s ultimately accountable? And, more importantly, are they equipped for it?

The Forces Driving the Horizontal Shift

Several forces are converging to make horizontal leadership the default, whether organizations are prepared or not. 

Economic and competitive pressures are forcing organizations to cut layers and move faster. But recent restructurings at Meta, Google, and Amazon have shown that shrinking middle management without rethinking how leadership operates can backfire. Work slows, accountability disintegrates, and burnout accelerates when coordination and communication break down.

Leaders who remain are also under extraordinary strain. According to DDI’s 2025 Global Leadership Forecast, more than 70% reported increased stress and 40% have considered leaving their role to protect their well-being. 

Seeing predecessors crumble under relentless pressure has many emerging leaders questioning whether traditional leadership roles are worth it. Career minimalism — prioritizing balance and flexibility over hustle culture — is shaping how Generation Z, in particular, thinks about advancement. Instead of climbing ladders, they’re prioritizing roles that allow space for life, passion projects, and side hustles that energize rather than exhaust them. 

Artificial intelligence is adding fuel to the fire. While senior leaders see AI as an accelerator, front-line leaders are concerned about its implications — namely, whether it will render them obsolete. The result is a widening gap between strategy and execution: Front-line leaders are expected to drive AI-enabled change and redesign workflows, often without the skills required to do so effectively. 

All of this contributes to the erosion of trust at the worst time. The DDI forecast found that trust in immediate managers has dropped sharply, falling below that of senior leaders for the first time. In flatter organizations (rather than hierarchical), where trust and influence are essential, this gap becomes an existential risk.

Podcast: From AI Fear to Fluency 
 

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The New Face of Leadership

Horizontal leadership doesn’t mean throwing out the organizational chart. It means abandoning the assumption that hierarchy alone produces leaders. This requires rethinking how to nurture leadership at all levels. 

Instead of relying on positional power, horizontal leaders build relationship capital, such as credibility earned through trust, transparency, and inclusion. Influence replaces authority granted by a title.

The scope of responsibility changes, as well. Leaders no longer work in verticals, accountable for only their own teams. They must also guide cross-functional work, where success depends on alignment — even when priorities, key performance indicators (KPIs), and incentives don’t always match. 

This requires a new set of skills. Adaptability becomes essential. People who can learn, adjust, and mobilize others through continuous change become the real most valuable players, regardless of their role in the hierarchy. 
 

Specialty Credential: AI+HI 
 

How HR Can Support the Shift

In flatter structures, every cross-functional project becomes a test of credibility, trust, and adaptability. Without the right skills, coaching, or expectations in place, leaders will struggle to find their footing, contributing to burnout, disengagement, and sluggish performance. 

HR plays a critical role in designing a culture that supports this new reality. Here’s where to focus development efforts:
 

1. Redefine career growth and succession planning. 

Career paths based solely on vertical progression are no longer viable. Instead, readiness now comes from breadth, not just depth. 

HR leaders must redefine advancement to emphasize lateral movement, cross-functional experience, and expanded influence. Reward leaders who build enterprisewide capacity, not just those who move up a narrow ladder. 

This matters as much for retention as it does readiness. The DDI forecast noted that high-potential talent is 3.7 times more likely to leave when development stalls or advancement feels slow. Reframing growth as skills expansion rather than a vertical climb keeps people on a viable leadership path. 

Webinar: Building Stronger Workplaces

2. Focus on skills over titles. 

There’s a stark contrast between the skills that organizations say matter and the skills that they actually develop. While setting strategy, managing change, developing future talent, and making sound decisions are widely lauded as critical, fewer than half of leaders reported being trained in these areas. 

Horizontal leadership demands these power skills along with collaboration, systems-based thinking, and facilitation over “fixing” — leaders must know how to guide teams in problem-solving instead of jumping in with the solution.  

In a world where one-third of required technical skills change every year, now is the time for HR to pivot development toward broader capabilities rather than role-based competencies.

3. Make trust a leadership capability, not just an interpersonal value. 

In flatter organizations, where authority alone no longer imparts automatic credibility, trust becomes a primary lever. 

According to the DDI forecast, employees were 11 times more likely to trust managers who support development, nine times more likely to trust those who give feedback, and nine times more likely to trust those who coach effectively. That means these are now operational requirements, not “nice-to-haves.”  

HR can provide deliberate training and coaching to help leaders develop trust-building skills and cultivate inherent authority.

4. Treat cross-functional projects as development opportunities. 

Matrixed projects are some of the most powerful development opportunities in the organization. They allow leaders to broaden stakeholder management beyond direct reports, build partnerships across the organization, understand how work fits into the larger system, and learn to mobilize resources beyond their immediate purview. 

HR can formalize the opportunity by setting clear expectations for leaders around building these skills, along with growing adaptability and influence, into project objectives, performance criteria, and KPIs. Use 360-degree feedback to track progress and help leaders understand how their influence lands across the organization, not just down the organizational chart.

5. Leverage AI as a strategic multiplier.  

Counter the perceived threat of AI by demonstrating it as a way to amplify leadership capacity. Foster AI fluency and position it as a parallel intelligence to augment human judgment rather than replace it. 

When leaders learn to use AI to surface patterns, test scenarios, and blend these insights with their own judgment, they make better decisions. This allows leaders to move faster, reduce cognitive load, and decrease burnout, freeing up time to focus more on influence and alignment. 

 

Horizontal leadership is becoming the default operating system of flatter, faster, AI-enabled organizations. But no operating system runs well without intentional design.

For HR leaders, that means succession planning, development, and culture can no longer rely on the vertical model. They must be redesigned for lateral leadership, shared accountability, and coordinated execution. 

Organizations that make this deliberate shift will build stronger leaders and succession pipelines that adapt to changing demands, are resilient under pressure, and attract and retain top talent — regardless of whether they have executive-level aspirations.

 

Stephanie Neal is the director of the Center for Analytics and Behavioral Research (CABER) at the global leadership development firm DDI, where she and her team manage strategic market research and trend studies on leadership in the workplace. Neal is the co-author of several industry-leading research reports, including DDI’s Global Leadership Forecast and Women as Mentors: Does She or Doesn't She? A Global Study of Businesswomen and Mentoring.

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