IT By Design's people-strategy thesis addresses a structural blind spot in channel organizations: leaders consistently deprioritize human capital until it breaks, even as 83.9% of channel partners identify AI consulting as their top growth driver in 2026 [2]. With 50.9% of partners actively hiring for C-suite leadership [2] and the channel AI platform market on track to reach $41.8B by 2029 [3], the cost of misaligned talent strategy is rising fast. ITBYD's positioning at the intersection of organizational design and AI-era scaling gives it a differentiated consulting narrative at precisely the right moment.
What is Covered in this Article
- People strategy as a hidden cost driver in scaling channel organizations [1][1]
- C-suite hiring demand and AI consulting as converging talent pressures [2][2]
- Channel AI platform market growth trajectory and its implications for human capital [3]
The News: Jill Chapman, featured on IT By Design's Sunny Silver Linings podcast, argues that the most consequential mistake leaders make is treating people strategy as separate from business strategy [1]. The root cause is structural: people challenges resist easy quantification, so they get deprioritized against dashboard-friendly metrics until something breaks [1]. The episode reframes people strategy not as an HR function but as a direct lever on growth outcomes for scaling companies [1]. This argument lands at a moment when channel partners face simultaneous pressure to hire C-suite leadership and build AI consulting capacity, two demands that are fundamentally inseparable from organizational design.
Can Channel Partners Build the Human Infrastructure AI Growth Demands?
Analyst Take: The channel ecosystem is running a talent deficit it has not fully priced in. Survey data shows that 83.9% of channel partners expect AI consulting to drive growth in 2026 [2], yet only 57.3% of respondents confirm they have deep subject-matter expertise in AI [4]. That gap does not close without deliberate people strategy, which is exactly the blind spot Chapman identifies [1].
The Measurement Problem Is a Strategy Problem
Chapman's core observation is precise: people challenges get deprioritized because they are harder to measure than a dashboard metric, causing them to be ignored until something breaks [1]. For channel companies scaling into AI-driven service delivery, this is not a soft-skills issue. It is a compounding operational risk. When 71% of channel partners already sell AI software including copilots [2], the human infrastructure required to support, consult on, and differentiate those offerings becomes a direct revenue variable. Leaders who treat organizational design as an HR function rather than a strategic lever [1] are effectively leaving margin on the table while their AI portfolio grows.
Talent Demand Is Converging at the Worst Possible Moment
Two data points from the Futurum Group Channel Ecosystems Decision Maker Survey define the pressure. First, 50.9% of channel partners expect to hire for C-suite leadership and management in 2026 [2]. Second, 83.9% cite AI consulting as a top growth driver for the same year [2]. These are not independent trends. Building an AI consulting practice requires leadership that can operationalize it, and that leadership is in short supply across the ecosystem. The 2H 2025 survey showed the same AI consulting signal at 84.8% [4], confirming this is a durable demand pattern, not a one-cycle spike. Partners who cannot close the gap between AI ambition and human capability will cede ground to those who can.
Market Scale Raises the Stakes for Getting People Strategy Right
The channel AI platform market is growing at a base CAGR of 36% from 2022 to 2029, with base-case market value growing from $14.2B in 2024 to $41.8B in 2029 [3]. At that trajectory, organizational misalignment is not a manageable inefficiency. It is a compounding cost that scales with the market. ITBYD's consulting narrative, anchored in people-centric organizational design, addresses the structural condition that most channel partners are not yet treating as a strategic priority. That positioning is well-timed: the partners who will capture disproportionate share of a $41.8B market are those who build the human infrastructure now, before the window narrows.
What to Watch
- Whether channel partners translate C-suite hiring intent into structured people strategy frameworks, or default to reactive recruitment [2]
- The pace at which AI consulting revenue materializes for partners who lack confirmed subject-matter expertise, given only 57.3% report deep AI knowledge [4]
- How ITBYD scales its consulting engagements as demand for organizational design expertise grows alongside the channel AI platform market [3]
- Whether the measurement gap Chapman identifies [1] becomes a recognized boardroom risk as AI-driven service delivery raises the cost of people-strategy failures
Sources
1. The People Mistake That’s Quietly Costing Growing Companies, Itbd, July 2026
2. Ecosystem, Channels, & Marketplaces 1H 2026 Decision Maker Survey, Futurum Research, June 2026
3. Ecosystem, Channels, & Marketplaces Market Forecast, Futurum Research, June 2026
4. Ecosystem, Channels, & Marketplaces 2H 2025 Decision Maker Survey, Futurum Research
Disclosure: Futurum is a research and advisory firm that engages or has engaged in research, analysis, and advisory services with many technology companies, including those mentioned in this article. The author does not hold any equity positions with any company mentioned in this article.
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This content is written by a commercial general-purpose language model (LLM) along with the Futurum Intelligence Platform, and has not been curated or reviewed by editors. Due to the inherent limitations in using AI tools, please consider the probability of error. The accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of this content cannot be guaranteed. It is generated on the date indicated at the top of the page, based on the content available, and it may be automatically updated as new content becomes available. The content does not consider any other information or perform any independent analysis.

