How hybrid work, AI, and changing leadership styles are quietly reshaping employee development.
Think back to the first few years of your career. There was probably someone who shaped the way you worked long before they ever became your manager. It may have been a senior colleague who explained why something was done a certain way instead of simply telling you what to do. Perhaps it was someone who invited you to client meetings just so you could observe how difficult conversations were handled. Maybe it was a manager who reviewed your work line by line, helping you understand not just the mistakes, but the thinking behind them.
Most professionals don’t remember every training course they’ve attended. They remember the people who invested in them. For decades, mentorship wasn’t treated as a formal corporate initiative. It happened naturally. New employees learned by sitting beside experienced colleagues, asking questions after meetings, watching negotiations unfold, observing leadership styles, and slowly building judgement through experience rather than instruction. Somewhere along the way, that began to change.
Today’s workplace is faster, leaner, more digital, and more distributed than at any point in history. Teams work across cities, provinces, and time zones. Hybrid schedules mean colleagues who once spent five days a week together may now only overlap once or twice. Artificial intelligence has automated many routine tasks, while managers are responsible for larger teams than ever before. Ironically, we’ve never had more learning platforms, online courses, certifications, and knowledge repositories available to employees.
Yet many organizations are quietly facing a different challenge. People are learning faster. But they’re developing slower.
Learning Isn’t the Same as Development
It’s easy to confuse access to information with professional growth. Modern employees can learn almost anything online. Technical courses, leadership certifications, AI tools, project management frameworks, communication workshops. Within minutes, almost any skill has a video, article, or training module attached to it.
But development has always been about far more than knowledge. Experience isn’t simply accumulated through information. It is built through observation, conversation, reflection, mistakes, and exposure to situations that cannot be replicated in a classroom.
A project manager doesn’t become exceptional by reading about stakeholder management. They become exceptional after navigating difficult clients, conflicting priorities, unexpected project failures, and challenging conversations with experienced leaders guiding them through those moments.
The same is true for leadership. No online course fully prepares someone to deliver difficult feedback, calm an anxious team during uncertainty, or make decisions with incomplete information. Those capabilities are usually transferred through people. Not platforms.
This distinction is becoming increasingly important as organizations invest heavily in technology while unintentionally reducing the opportunities for knowledge transfer that once happened naturally every day.
The Quiet Cost of Hybrid Work
Hybrid work has undoubtedly created tremendous flexibility. Employees save commuting time, organizations access wider talent pools, and many teams report stronger work-life balance. But flexibility has also removed something many organizations didn’t realize they depended on. Accidental mentorship. Think about how many professional lessons used to happen without scheduling them.
A junior analyst overhearing a client call. An informal conversation after a meeting. Watching a senior colleague solve a problem on a whiteboard. Asking a quick question while walking back from lunch. None of these moments appeared on performance metrics. Yet they often became the foundation of professional growth. Today, many interactions are scheduled, intentional, and task-focused.
Video meetings begin. Objectives are discussed. Actions are assigned. The meeting ends.
The conversations that once happened before and after those meetings have quietly disappeared. Microsoft’s 2024 Work Trend Index found that employees now spend significantly more time inside scheduled collaboration while experiencing constant digital interruptions throughout the workday. The average knowledge worker receives hundreds of notifications, emails, chats, and meeting requests each week, leaving very little unstructured time for coaching or informal learning.
In other words, work is becoming increasingly efficient. But relationships are becoming increasingly transactional.
Managers Have Less Time to Teach
Mentorship also depends on something increasingly scarce inside modern organizations.
Time.
Today’s managers are expected to lead larger teams while simultaneously delivering projects, managing stakeholders, reporting performance, navigating organizational change, adopting new technologies, and supporting employee wellbeing.
According to Gallup’s State of the Global Workplace research, managers continue to experience some of the highest levels of workplace stress and burnout. Gallup has consistently identified managers as the group carrying the greatest responsibility for employee engagement while often receiving the least support themselves.
That creates an impossible equation. When calendars are already full, coaching often becomes the first activity sacrificed. Not because leaders don’t value mentorship. Because operational priorities always feel more urgent.
A one-hour coaching conversation is easily replaced by another meeting. A quick learning opportunity becomes a Teams message. A thoughtful discussion becomes a document.
Over time, these small compromises accumulate. Employees still receive direction. But they receive far less development.
Experience Is Becoming Harder to Observe
One of the greatest challenges facing younger professionals today is that many of the most valuable workplace skills are invisible. You cannot fully understand leadership by reading meeting notes. You cannot develop executive presence by watching recorded presentations.
You cannot learn negotiation, influence, political awareness, or judgement solely through documentation. These are skills people absorb by watching experienced professionals navigate complexity in real time.
As workplaces become increasingly digital, many of those opportunities are becoming harder to access. Organizations have become exceptionally good at documenting processes. They have become less intentional about transferring experience. And those are not the same thing.
AI Is Accelerating the Gap, Not Replacing Mentorship
Artificial intelligence is transforming how work gets done, but it is also changing how professionals gain experience. Tasks that once helped junior employees build confidence, such as drafting reports, conducting research, creating presentations, or analyzing large datasets, can now be completed much faster with AI-powered tools.
While this improves efficiency, it also changes the learning journey. Traditionally, repetitive work wasn’t simply “busy work.” It was where professionals learned patterns, developed judgment, and gradually understood how businesses operated.
Today, many of those early learning moments are being compressed. According to Microsoft’s 2024 Work Trend Index, 75% of knowledge workers now use AI in some capacity at work, with many saying it helps them save time and increase productivity. At the same time, leaders are expecting employees to adapt more quickly, learn continuously, and take on broader responsibilities.
The challenge is that productivity can be accelerated far more easily than experience. Knowing how to use AI effectively is valuable. Knowing when not to rely on it is experience. That wisdom still comes from people.
Why This Matters for Canadian Organizations
Canada’s workforce is changing rapidly. An aging workforce, continued skills shortages across several industries, and growing investment in AI mean organizations cannot afford to lose institutional knowledge.
According to Statistics Canada, nearly one in four Canadians will be aged 65 or older by the early 2030s, creating significant leadership succession challenges across many sectors. At the same time, organizations continue to compete for experienced professionals in technology, healthcare, finance, and skilled trades.
Replacing knowledge is expensive. Transferring it is far more valuable. The organizations that invest in mentorship today won’t simply build stronger employees. They’ll build stronger leadership pipelines, preserve institutional knowledge, and create workplaces where learning remains part of everyday work, not just annual training plans.
Mentorship Was Never About Meetings
Perhaps we’ve been thinking about mentorship the wrong way. It isn’t another HR initiative. It isn’t another programme to launch or another KPI to measure. Mentorship has always been something much simpler. It is a senior colleague taking ten extra minutes to explain why a decision was made. It is inviting someone into a conversation they weren’t expected to attend.
It is giving context instead of instructions. It is allowing people to observe, question, and grow through experience rather than expectation. Those moments rarely appear on performance dashboards. But they shape careers.
As organizations continue investing in AI, automation, and digital transformation, they should remember that technology can improve how work gets done, but it cannot replace the human experience that turns capable employees into confident leaders. The future of work will undoubtedly be powered by technology. But the future of leadership will still be built through people.
A Final Say
As organizations continue investing in AI, automation, and digital transformation, it’s worth remembering that technology can accelerate work, but it cannot accelerate wisdom.
The best workplaces have never been built solely on processes or platforms. They’ve been built on conversations. On experienced professionals taking the time to explain not just what needs to be done, but why it matters.
Perhaps mentorship doesn’t need another programme or another framework. Maybe it simply needs to become a leadership habit again. Because organizations don’t lose knowledge when people leave. They lose it when experience is never passed on in the first place.
Sabah Shakeel
Staff Writer, Digital Marketing Specialist
SRA Group