Motaz Agamawi is the CTO and partner at PwC. He is also the author of The Innovative Dinosaur.getty​For years, the ambition of the modern organization was clear and universal. Across industries, geographies and scales, leaders shared a common objective: become digital.​It was a necessary journey. Software redefined products. Connectivity reshaped markets. Platforms transformed entire industries. Those who adapted survived; many who didn't faded.​In working with organizations across industries, a consistent pattern has emerged: The challenge is no longer access to technology but differentiation in how it is applied.And yet as we stand today in 2026, something feels fundamentally different. Digital capabilities are no longer rare; they are the expected baseline. Artificial intelligence, once an experimental frontier, is now widely accessible and embedded in the tools we use daily. Organizations are building faster than ever before, deploying systems in days that once required years of investment. A new question emerges, quietly at first, then unmistakably: If everyone can build with intelligence, what makes any organization truly different?The answer lies in a profound shift from execution to understanding. This article is the first in a three-part series exploring the evolution toward the augmented intelligent enterprise. In this opening piece, I'll focus on the structural shift itself. The subsequent articles will examine the emerging enterprise archetypes behind this transformation and the strategic challenges leaders must address as intelligence becomes embedded into the core fabric of the organization. We are witnessing the evolution from the digital enterprise to what I'll refer to as the augmented intelligent enterprise—an organization that does not merely operate intelligent systems but thinks alongside them.​Beyond Digital: A New Logic Of Value Creation​In my book The Innovative Dinosaur, I noted that the journey from being a traditional enterprise to a digital one revealed a deep truth: Organizations do not transform because of technology alone. They transform when the logic of value creation itself changes.The industrial enterprise built value through physical production. The service enterprise delivered value through human interaction. The digital enterprise scaled value through software and connectivity. Today, we are standing at the edge of a shift that is less visible yet far more profound. It is no longer about what organizations build, how they deliver or even how they scale. It is about something more fundamental: how they think.​​Each stage extended the one before it. Each addressed the limitations of its time. But transformation does not stop at digital. It continues, quietly, structurally, into a new phase. It's not one of replacement or of disruption in the destructive sense but rather one of evolution.​This evolution brings us to the concept of the augmented intelligent enterprise. It is an organization where intelligence is not an add-on or a stand-alone tool but a core capability embedded in the strategic fabric of the business. Where knowledge is not merely stored in databases but actively engaged and activated. Where interactions and decisions are continuously captured and fed back into the system to a continuously evolving system that learns and adapts.​In such an enterprise, the output is no longer limited to products or services. It becomes something more fluid yet more powerful, where decisions, insights and adaptive execution are made at scale.​The Strategic Shift: From Substitution To Augmentation​At first glance, the difference may appear subtle. After all, digital enterprises already use data, automate processes and build sophisticated systems. But beneath the surface, a fundamental shift has occurred. Software is no longer the differentiator; it is the baseline. The real advantage lies in how an organization learns to capture what it knows, give structure to that knowledge and consistently apply and refine it over time.​This requires a strategic realignment. The augmented intelligent enterprise views AI not as a means to replace human effort but as a strategic lever to elevate human capability.​Augmentation is often misunderstood. It is frequently reduced to the idea of assistance: machines helping humans work faster, tools supporting existing processes, systems optimizing what is already there. But this interpretation misses the essence of what is unfolding. Augmentation is often misunderstood as incremental improvement. In practice, it changes the scope of what the enterprise can actually do.​This is the foundation of a new archetype: an organization that does not replace its existing capabilities but evolves them. Where human intelligence, machine intelligence and structured knowledge are combined into a unified system. Not to optimize the present, but to extend the boundaries of what is possible.​When Systems Begin To Think​In traditional environments, processes are defined and followed. In digital environments, processes are optimized and automated. But in an augmented intelligent enterprise, something new begins to happen. Processes no longer remain static; they respond, adapt and learn.​A decision is no longer a one-time event; it becomes part of a continuous loop. Each outcome informs the next. Each interaction strengthens the system. Software changes its role from simply executing predefined logic to actively participating, interpreting context, generating options and refining outcomes. And alongside it, the human role does not diminish. It evolves.The Open Question: What Comes Next?​​When intelligence scales across an entire enterprise, it begins to interact in unpredictable ways. The next frontier is not just about human-AI collaboration, but about AI-to-AI orchestration, a state where multiple intelligent systems negotiate, learn and evolve together within the boundaries of the enterprise.How will organizations govern systems that are capable of self-adaptation? How will leadership change when strategy is co-created with machines? And what new archetypes will emerge when the enterprise itself becomes fully cognitive?These questions define the next chapter of enterprise evolution. But to understand what comes next, we must first step back and examine how enterprises themselves have evolved, and why the emergence of a new archetype is no longer optional but inevitable.In the next article, we explore the evolution of enterprise models, and the rise of the augmented intelligent enterprise as a distinct category.Forbes Technology Council is an invitation-only community for world-class CIOs, CTOs and technology executives. Do I qualify?