Recently, Asana announced what it describes as an "Operating System for Human-Agent Teams", positioning AI agents as active participants in organisational workflows rather than standalone tools.
At first glance, this might sound like just another AI announcement. However, beneath the marketing language lies an important shift in how organisations may manage work in the coming years.
Asana recently described the future of work as "a fully onboarded agentic crew." Whilst the phrase may sound futuristic, the underlying principle is straightforward: organisations are beginning to combine human expertise with AI-powered execution.
For decades, work management has focused on helping people collaborate more effectively. The next phase may be helping people and AI agents collaborate - together.
The question for organisations isn't whether AI will become part of the workplace. The real question is: How do you successfully integrate AI into the way work gets done?
"The future isn't single-player AI. It's a fully onboarded agentic crew."
Most organisations have already experienced several waves of workplace transformation:
The next stage appears to be the introduction of AI agents into everyday business processes.
Unlike traditional automation, AI agents can reason, make recommendations, gather information, and execute tasks within defined boundaries. Rather than simply triggering a workflow, they become active participants in it.
Imagine:
The objective isn't to replace people OR expertise.
It's to allow people to focus on higher-value activities while agents handle repetitive, administrative and information-heavy tasks.
"I don't want my team's time spent on busywork!”
Many organisations are already experimenting with tools such as ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot and other generative AI solutions.
These tools are impressive, but they often operate outside the systems where work actually happens.
This creates familiar challenges:
The real opportunity emerges when AI becomes embedded directly into business processes and work management systems.
In other words:
AI needs workflows.
Without structure, AI simply creates more information.
With structure, AI can help organisations execute more effectively.
"AI is best thought of as a co-worker, not a tool."
- Ethan Mollick | “Co-Intelligence: Living and Working with AI” >>
One important point is often overlooked in discussions about AI.
Successful human-agent teams require the same foundations that successful work management initiatives have always required:
Without these foundations, AI simply scales existing inefficiencies.
This is why organisations that have already invested in modern work management platforms may be better positioned to take advantage of AI than those still relying on email, spreadsheets and disconnected systems.
We've seen first-hand how organisations benefit when work becomes more visible, structured and collaborative.
For example:
When BDQ worked with Universal Robots to optimise their Asana environment, the focus was on improving visibility, collaboration and reporting across marketing operations. The result was significantly improved efficiency and management insight, allowing teams to spend less time coordinating work and more time delivering outcomes.
As AI becomes part of day-to-day execution, the importance of visibility does not disappear. As Universal Robots noted during their Asana implementation:
"It takes a whole team to bring a project to fruition. The visibility and collaboration that we get with Asana is crucial."
- Universal Robots | Case Study >>
Similarly, Northside Achievement Zone (NAZ) moved away from manual spreadsheets and PDF-based reporting to create a visible and dynamic goal management framework within Asana. This improved transparency and made strategic planning easier to manage over time.
These projects were not AI initiatives.
However, they established the structured work management foundations that make future AI adoption far more achievable.
"It was more efficient and cost-effective to replicate and clone things in Asana than rework in spreadsheets."
- Northside Achievement Zone | Case Study >>
You don't need to wait for the next generation of AI capabilities to begin preparing.
Instead, focus on:
The most successful organisations of the next decade are unlikely to be those that simply deploy the most AI.
Instead, they will be the organisations that successfully combine:
Human-agent teams are not about replacing people.
They are about extending the capabilities of teams through intelligent collaboration.
As work management platforms evolve to support this new model, organisations have an opportunity to rethink how work is planned, executed and improved at scale.
The future may not be human versus AI - It may be human and AI working together in the same workflow.
Whether you're implementing Asana, improving project visibility, or exploring how AI can enhance your existing processes, BDQ can help you build the foundations required for long-term success.
"We help our customers work and collaborate better through the use of technology."
Get in touch to discuss your work management strategy.