
Timothy State is the founder and CEO of Altius, where he focuses on helping organizations improve performance through better health and well-being.
He has spent more than two decades working in and around workplace health, leadership, and organizational effectiveness. His work often sits at the intersection of business strategy and employee well-being, with a focus on practical outcomes rather than theory alone. He has contributed to broader industry conversations through organizations like the Business Group on Health and the American Heart Association.
In this conversation, we get a clear sense of Timothy’s outlook on how companies need to move beyond traditional wellness programs and toward more continuous, personalized support systems that can scale across organizations.
M.R. Rangaswami: Organizations have spent billions on employee wellbeing programs over the past decade, yet disengagement and burnout remain widespread. What fundamental assumption about workplace wellbeing do you believe companies have been getting wrong?
Timothy State: The disengagement and burnout epidemic has several root causes. Despite many positive efforts out there, a common mistake has been approaching workforce wellbeing as a program instead of a core strategic asset. It is critical to understand it as something concrete and predictable that can be produced and improved via a system of inputs we can directly guide.
Like any other vital, competitive business resource it requires effective, real-time measurement, influence at-scale, and predictive intelligence to remain proactive with interventions.
Isolated point solutions like mental health apps, fitness challenges and surveys, for example, may have their individual value, but these efforts rarely come together to see or address the wider, upstream drivers of performance. They tend to be parts of a fragmented system that doesn’t engage employees at scale and leaves leaders uncertain about what actually improves outcomes. That also makes for a hazy ROI picture on what drives real value.
At Altius, we see elevating the quality of the “human system” as being foundational to high, sustained organizational performance. The collective evidence and our own experience is clear on this. Declines in human life quality in the workforce reduce productivity, engagement, and retention, while driving population health costs and a range of other negative effects on consumer experience.
Yet most organizations still measure workforce wellbeing episodically (if at all) using surveys or narrow program participation metrics, seeing lagging glimpses rather than continuous and predictive signal of their workforce’s holistic condition.
The needed shift is moving from an isolated programs-view to constant upstream visibility into the human system. Via technology, real-time signal on human life quality at scale enables predictive guidance to individuals and proactive decisions for organizations. This transforms human wellbeing from a cost center into a driver of measurable business performance.
M.R.: Most HR technologies today measure engagement through surveys or episodic check-ins. You’ve argued that continuous conversational data changes how organizations understand the “human system.” Why is this shift so significant?
Timothy: Many organizations rely heavily on legacy tools such as annual and pulse surveys which capture static snapshots of sentiment. These miss the dynamic nature of work and life, and by the time data is analyzed, the relevant moment has often passed.
Embedding private, conversational AI that is really good at helping people improve their life quality also enables organizations to shift from episodic measurement to continuous understanding. Natural coaching interactions with an AI Life Quality companion like ours – Alti™ – generate richer insights and influence into personal wellbeing, engagement, and performance – especially when combined with other contextual data. This enables proactive, hyper-personalized guidance to individuals, and generates real-time patterns and predictive intelligence at a population level to drive smart employer decisions and interventions.
This shift is significant because it makes the actual “human system” much more discoverable. Continuous insights, rooted in a scientific model for human life quality, help organizations clearly identify risk signals early, take more intelligent actions, and understand how wellbeing, engagement, and productivity interact. It moves the focus from reactive surveys to proactive human optimization.
M.R.: As AI transforms the workplace, many leaders are focused on automation and efficiency. You often talk about AI as a tool to elevate human potential instead. How do you see AI reshaping the relationship between people, performance, and organizations over the next decade?
Tim: The next decade will seem like several decades packed into one, relative to disruptive change rate and opportunity. There are extreme or negative possible scenarios that get written about a lot. However, there is a positive, pro-human and pro-growth version of the future we need to clearly envision now and build toward.
Current AI discussions focus heavily on task automation and replacement, process efficiency or human labor reduction. Leaders have a responsibility to consider all these. However, true transformation lies in using AI to elevate human potential, unlock the increased value employees can bring, and achieve much better understanding and influence over how human-generated value reaches the end consumer. How we think, contribute, collaborate and thrive in work is going to change massively. Our opportunity is to apply wisdom and agency to strengthen the human system and build long-term competitive value.
1. Personalized Intelligence: From Tool to Cognitive Partner
Over the next decade, AI will function as hyper-personalized intelligence – a continuous, context-aware partner that helps us navigate both work and life more effectively. The point won’t be to outsource our thinking, but to help us think and act better, more clearly, and with greater order.
For employees, AI becomes a force multiplier: real-time guidance, improved access to resources, collaboration and personalized support that meets people where they are. For leaders, this is profoundly de-burdening. The relationship between manager and team member shifts from periodic check-ins to continuous, intelligent enablement.
We move from performance measurement to performance amplification.
2. The Human System: From Hierarchy to Organizational Intelligence
The second shift is structural. AI collapses coordination constraints, simplifying hierarchies while improving decision speed and quality. Managers are freed to focus on judgment, mentorship, and developing people.
At the same time, AI makes the human system more visible and connected, revealing how wellbeing, engagement, and productivity interact as one system.
3. Human Potential as a Compounding Asset
This is the most consequential shift. Human capital begins to appreciate rather than depreciate when people are supported with tools that accelerate learning, health, and contribution.
AI also shortens the feedback loop between employee actions and customer value, allowing organizations to innovate faster and more precisely.
Leading in this era means building environments where people become healthier, more capable, and more impactful – and where human-generated value is actively cultivated.
M.R. Rangaswami is the Co-Founder of Sandhill.com