I love this image; we used it in a presentation on digital transformation a while back. At the time, we used it to create tension between the external appearance (human hand) and internal evolution (robotic machinery), symbolizing the distinction between superficial change and genuine digital transformation. Good content often lives in the tension between old and new, analog and digital, expected and surprising.
However, with the advent of AI, inspecting the visual again, the tension transforms into current anxiety: "Where do I end and the machine begin?" People still see human "hands" (marketing, branding, user interface), but underneath, organizations are increasingly run by algorithms, automation, and AI logic. So, the image might also help us ponder: "Are you just using digital tools or are you becoming something else because of them?"
Given that we created this image before the widespread adoption of AI, a guideline might emerge: sometimes, the future meaning of your work only becomes apparent later. A slide, a visual, a phrase that once meant "digital transformation" might now provoke questions about identity, control, or human-AI fusion. This might be an interesting exercise: Don't discard old content but rather re-examine it with today's lens. Before making something new, revisit what you've already made. You might discover the insight was there all along, waiting for the right moment.