Agentic workflows, AI copilots, real-time data systems, and autonomous monitoring, these are reshaping human capability. The future probably belongs to people who can combine deep human judgment with the ability to operate across interconnected systems.
I think we are slowly moving from a world built around hierarchies to a world built around flows. For decades, organizations were designed around structure. Information moved vertically. Expertise stayed inside departments.
And I think this changes what valuable skills look like. In the past, organizations optimized for hierarchy, specialization, and control. Now the advantage lies in adaptability, coordination, systems thinking, communication, speed of learning, and the ability to work with tools.
This is the business model companies will need to build smaller teams, higher leverage per person, and faster execution as a default. Still early, but the signal is clear enough to start operating differently.
We concluded a month one with Claude Enterprise across 27 people, using it on real work across teams, debugging production issues, writing and refactoring code, understanding unfamiliar systems, generating documentation, and accelerating day-to-day execution.
Engineers are still reviewing, testing, and making decisions as before, but the distance between “this needs to be done” and “it’s done” has reduced significantly.
Looking at just 7 engineers from the data/software team, we spent roughly $1,200 over the month and saved about 550 hours of work, which translates to ~$5,000+ (Indian Salaries) worth of engineering time around a 4x return. The important shift was how work actually moved.
Proqio is the interface: real-time trends, anomaly detection, decision-ready insight.
Not dashboards.
Not PDFs.
Living infrastructure intelligence.
If you’re still working in silos, the world has already moved on.
DM to see what’s coming.
Infrastructure doesn’t fail suddenly. It whispers first.
We built Infinitus to capture those signals, uniting InSAR, IoT sensors, environmental data, and engineering context into one intelligence layer.
The policy opportunity is clear: embed multi-layer monitoring into national resilience strategies, not as isolated projects, but as long-term, interoperable systems that support planning, prioritization, and public safety.