Jan. 12, 2026

100: "How To Prevent AI from Atrophying Our Brain?" ft. Alli Murphy

100: "How To Prevent AI from Atrophying Our Brain?" ft. Alli Murphy

In this timely and thought-provoking conversation, Erik and Alli explore what it means to lead in the age of AI. As team members start working with large language models, AI copilots, and digital assistants, leadership is no longer just about people—it’s about protocols. From new security risks and brain atrophy to digital clones and ChatGPT accountability, they map out the practical and ethical terrain of leading teams armed with supertools. If you lead a team (or will soon), this episode is your onboarding to the AI-powered workplace.

🧭 Conversation Highlights

  • The two biggest risks of AI use: brain atrophy and data exposure
  • Why quality control matters more in an AI-powered team
  • Why leaders must create protocols for feedback and accountability—even with AI
  • The difference between an algorithm and a large language model (and why it matters)
  • How to teach your team to lead digital coworkers as effectively as human ones
  • Wild but real scenarios: legal risks of cloning employees, sparring with AI board members, and managing chatbots that miss deadlines

💡 Key Takeaways

  • AI doesn’t replace leadership—it raises the stakes. Tools can create speed, but humans still guide context, ethics, and accountability.
  • If your team is using AI, talk about it. You can’t lead what you don’t understand or even know is happening.
  • Data intimacy still matters. AI can generate insights, but only you can understand the story behind the numbers.
  • Feedback isn’t just for people. You need to build clear “rules of engagement” with your AI tools—just like a new hire.
  • Legal and ethical questions are coming. Who owns an AI clone of your employee? You might need to decide… soon.

❓ Questions That Mattered

  • What does it actually mean to manage AI tools—not just people?
  • How do you avoid letting your team’s strategic thinking atrophy?
  • What conversations should leaders have about how AI is being used?
  • When does generative content need more editing, not less?
  • Who owns your digital avatar if you leave your job?

🗣️ Notable Quotes

“Generation is no longer the hard part. It’s quality and editing that are scarce now.” —Erik

“If you’re not using part of your brain anymore, you’re going to lose it. AI can atrophy our thinking.” —Alli

“You still need rules of engagement—just like with a real human.” —Alli

“You can’t run a report for the stories you didn’t ask your AI to tell.” —Erik

“This isn’t a reason not to use AI—but it is a reason to lead differently.” —Erik

🔗 Links & Resources