What If the Office Was Never the Point?
For years, the office was seen as the beating heart of business. If you wanted to prove your company was real, you needed a physical space. Desks. A kitchen. A place where people clocked in, gathered, and did the work.
But as Alpesh Doshi, founder of Kendra Labs, reminded us in a recent episode of The Bliss Business Podcast, the real transformation isn’t just about where we work. It’s about rethinking the purpose, structure, and strategy of work itself.
Alpesh has been advising startups and enterprise leaders on how to build the future of business with AI at the center. But his view goes far beyond automation. He challenges organizations to redesign their operations with a people-first, systems-intelligent mindset. What’s outdated isn’t just the office. It’s the assumption that presence equals productivity.
Remote Work Wasn’t a Revolution, It Was a Reckoning
The pandemic didn’t usher in a remote work revolution. It exposed how unprepared we were to begin with.
Most companies didn’t transition to remote intentionally. They were pushed into it overnight. As a result, they replicated in-person dysfunction online. Endless Zoom meetings. Lack of documentation. Vague expectations. Misaligned communication.
According to Alpesh, one of the most overlooked opportunities was to intentionally codify the way people work. At Kendra Labs, they’ve done exactly that — creating rituals, rules of engagement, and systems that make work visible, shared, and scalable across time zones. It’s not about control. It’s about clarity.
He shared examples of asynchronous-first communication, default-to-sharing norms, and onboarding practices that give people a real understanding of how to succeed in a distributed environment. In his words, “If people don’t understand the operating model, how can you expect them to thrive in it?”
Accountability Without Micromanagement
One of the most striking points Alpesh made was about accountability in remote settings. Contrary to old-school assumptions, distributed teams can be more accountable, not less. But it requires rethinking the mechanics.
Traditional models rely on top-down supervision. In self-managed teams, accountability emerges from a shared sense of purpose and mutual responsibility. People don’t want to let down their peers. And when the goal is clear and the mission matters, performance often takes care of itself.
Still, this model isn’t automatic. Many professionals, especially early in their careers, have never been taught how to succeed without structure. It’s not that they’re incapable. It’s that the system never invested in their autonomy.
This is where leadership comes in. Organizations that want to build resilient, empowered teams must also teach skills like goal-setting, self-awareness, and ownership. These are not soft skills. They’re strategic.
Isolation Is Real and Preventable
Remote work has many benefits, but let’s be honest — it can be lonely.
Alpesh didn’t shy away from this. He spoke openly about the need to design for connection, not just productivity. Culture doesn’t disappear in a distributed model, but it does require more intention.
Spontaneous hallway chats. Morning coffee with a colleague. Team lunches. These weren’t just perks. They were part of the emotional fabric that kept teams cohesive.
Now, leaders must create new rituals that foster belonging. Virtual roundtables. Cross-functional collaboration spaces. Off-site gatherings with purpose. Even well-designed Slack channels can restore some of the human magic we lost.
As Alpesh said, “Remote-first doesn’t mean people-last.”
The Rise of the AI-First Organization
Perhaps the most forward-looking part of the conversation was Alpesh’s vision for “AI-first” companies. Not businesses that just use AI, but those built with AI at the center of their workflows, decisions, and operations.
He shared jaw-dropping examples of lean teams using AI to scale up with incredible efficiency. One company he referenced hit $100 million in revenue with just 15 people. Another founder eliminated nearly all hourly reporting, replacing it with outcome-based metrics driven by smart automation.
But he also pointed to friction. Engineers refusing to adopt AI tools out of fear. Leaders worried they’ll lose visibility. Founders wrestling with trust.
The lesson? It’s not just the tools that need upgrading. It’s the mindset.
True AI-first companies are not just digitized. They’re rehumanized. They use AI to remove friction, elevate insight, and refocus people on high-value work that drives meaning, not burnout.
Purpose Is Still the Anchor
Despite all the talk of tools, systems, and strategy, Alpesh kept returning to one core idea: purpose.
Without purpose, autonomy feels like abandonment. Without purpose, AI feels like surveillance. Without purpose, growth becomes noise.
When people understand the why behind their work, accountability rises. Innovation flows. Collaboration improves. The organization becomes more than a place. It becomes a shared mission.
That’s the future of work. Not office versus remote. Not AI versus human. But aligned purpose, thoughtful systems, and empathetic leadership.
Final Thought
As we navigate the next chapter of work, we have to ask harder questions than “when are people in the office?”
We need to ask:
- Do people understand how to succeed here?
- Are we designing systems that support autonomy and accountability?
- Are we leading with purpose, not just productivity?
Alpesh Doshi’s insights remind us that the companies that thrive won’t just embrace change. They’ll architect it. With empathy. With clarity. And with purpose at the core.
Check out our full conversation with Alpesh Doshi on The Bliss Business Podcast.
Originally Featured on The Bliss Business Podcast Blog
