The modern marketing organization is not a factory that produces campaigns; it is a Decision Factory that produces choices. In this episode, legendary strategist Roger Martin returns to explain why his 20-year-old "Knowledge Funnel" is more relevant in 2026 than ever before. As AI commoditizes the "mode" (the average), the role of the marketer must shift from executing tasks to solving mysteries and developing heuristics. If you are using AI to do your job faster, you are likely just making yourself easier to replace. To survive, you must learn to use AI as an "interlocutor" that frees you to do the one thing AI cannot: reflect.
Key Takeaways
The Wage Bill Reality: Knowledge workers now represent nearly half the workforce but over 70% of the wage bill, making the efficiency of the "Decision Factory" the single biggest management challenge of the century.
AI is a Mode-Seeker: AI is mathematically designed to find the mode—the most frequent, average response. It will give you the "standard" approach faster than any human, but it cannot give you the "best" or "unique" approach.
The Reflection Gap: In a study of "best and brightest" consultants, less than 1% actually practiced reflection on their work. This lack of "intellectual curiosity" is what makes workers susceptible to AI replacement.
The Outsourcing Trap: Companies often pay 7.5x the cost of a consultant because they have fixed "flat" structures and can't find the right 50 people for a project. The future belongs to project-based organizations.
About Roger
Roger Martin is a trusted strategy advisor to CEOs and the author of Playing to Win and The Design of Business. He is a former Dean of the Rotman School of Management and was named the #1 management thinker in the world by Thinkers50.
Website: RogerMartin.com
LinkedIn: Roger Martin
Timestamps
01:02 – Why the "Decision Factory" is more relevant in the age of AI.
04:42 – Breaking down the Knowledge Funnel: Mystery to Heuristic to Algorithm.
10:16 – The McDonald’s Example: Turning a heuristic into a billion-dollar algorithm.
13:43 – Why management is failing the 21st-century knowledge worker.
23:28 – The "Sad Irony" of AI: Why managers are terrified of mystery work.
35:58 – Understanding AI as a "Mode-Seeking Device".
41:26 – The "Grief and Woe" of the 1% reflection rate.
01:01:25 – Roger’s personal origin story: Why his mother never gave him answers.
References
Martin, R. L. (2009). The Design of Business: Why Design Thinking is the Next Competitive Advantage. Harvard Business Review Press.
Martin, R. L. (2010, July-August). The Execution Trap. Harvard Business Review, 88(7/8), 64–71. https://hbr.org/2010/07/the-execution-trap
Martin, R. L. (2013, October). Rethinking the Decision Factory. Harvard Business Review, 91(10), 96–103. https://hbr.org/2013/10/rethinking-the-decision-factory
Martin, R. L. (2024, March 11). Strategy & Artificial Intelligence: A Story of Heuristics, Means, and Tails. Medium. https://rogermartin.medium.com/strategy-artificial-intelligence-6f719015b8fc
Martin, R. L. (2025, March 24). Will Artificial Intelligence Eradicate Practitioners of Strategy? Medium. https://rogermartin.medium.com/will-artificial-intelligence-eradicate-practitioners-of-strategy-dead2f716e8d
Martin, R. L. (2025, December 8). A Leader’s Role in Fostering AI Superpowers. The Strategic Practitioner. https://rogerlmartin.substack.com/p/a-leaders-role-in-fostering-ai-superpowers
Martin, R. L. (2025, December 15). Strategy & Artificial Intelligence: Entry-Level Hires. Medium. https://rogermartin.medium.com/strategy-artificial-intelligence-entry-level-hires-4da6cab808f0