Right-sizing has become a permanent loop rather than a corrective event.
(Illustrative AI-generated image).
“Right-sizing” is typically framed as a corrective action. Organizations expand too far, drift from efficiency, and then recalibrate headcount to restore balance. The implication is finality: once right-sized, stability returns.
In 2026, that promise is no longer credible.
Across industries—especially in technology, services, and platform-driven businesses—right-sizing has become continuous rather than corrective. Organizations move through repeated cycles of hiring, cutting, re-hiring, and re-cutting without ever reaching a durable equilibrium. Workforce volatility is no longer a temporary phase; it is an operating condition.
This article explains why right-sizing never ends, how organizations get trapped in workforce volatility loops, and what boards must rethink if they want stability without stagnation.
The Myth of the “Correct” Headcount
Right-sizing assumes that an optimal headcount exists.
That assumption held when demand was predictable, product cycles were long, and labor productivity changed slowly. Today, none of those conditions apply. Demand fluctuates sharply. Technology reshapes roles continuously. AI alters output per employee faster than planning cycles can absorb.
As a result, the “correct” headcount is a moving target. By the time an organization adjusts, conditions have already changed.
Right-sizing chases equilibrium that no longer exists.
Forecasting Error Is the Root Cause
At the core of perpetual right-sizing is forecasting error.
Organizations still plan headcount based on multi-quarter growth assumptions. When growth overshoots, they hire aggressively. When assumptions break, they cut reactively. Each cycle reinforces the next because the underlying planning model remains unchanged.
The problem is not execution—it is false precision in workforce forecasting.
As long as headcount is planned against long-range certainty, volatility is guaranteed.
How AI Accelerates the Cycle
AI intensifies the loop.
Productivity gains arrive unevenly. Some teams double output with the same staff, while others see minimal impact. Roles are partially automated rather than fully replaced, creating ambiguity about capacity needs.
Leadership responds cautiously—pausing hiring, then cutting, then rehiring as bottlenecks appear elsewhere. The workforce becomes a constantly adjusted variable rather than a stable system.
AI does not reduce volatility by default. It exposes planning rigidity.
Cost Discipline Without Design Creates Instability
Many organizations pursue cost discipline episodically.
They cut headcount to meet margin targets but fail to redesign workflows, decision rights, or accountability. The organization becomes cheaper—but not simpler. Over time, inefficiencies reappear in new forms, triggering the next right-sizing round.
Cost reduction without organizational redesign is temporary relief. It treats symptoms, not structure.
This is why right-sizing keeps returning.
The Psychological Toll of Endless Adjustment
Perpetual right-sizing has human consequences that compound over time.
Employees stop trusting workforce plans. Hiring announcements are met with skepticism; growth narratives lose credibility. People optimize for short-term survival rather than long-term contribution.
The organization becomes cautious, transactional, and internally competitive. Productivity does not collapse—but ambition narrows.
This cultural erosion is gradual and often invisible to leadership until innovation slows materially.
Why “Lean” Becomes a Permanent State
Repeated right-sizing pushes organizations toward a permanently lean posture.
At first, leanness improves focus. Over time, it eliminates slack entirely. Teams operate at maximum utilization, leaving no buffer for experimentation, learning, or recovery from shocks.
In this state, any disruption—market, regulatory, or technical—forces immediate cuts or emergency hiring. Volatility becomes self-sustaining.
Lean stops being a strategy and becomes a constraint.
Boards Often Reinforce the Cycle
Boards play an unintended role in perpetuating right-sizing loops.
They reward rapid cost correction and margin recovery but rarely ask whether the underlying operating model has changed. They approve workforce reductions without demanding redesign plans. They accept volatility as proof of responsiveness.
Without explicit challenge, management optimizes for optics rather than durability.
Stability is rarely requested—only efficiency.
What Stable Organizations Do Differently
Organizations that escape the volatility loop share distinct characteristics.
They:
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Plan around capacity ranges, not fixed headcount
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Separate structural roles from variable work
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Use flexible staffing models intentionally, not reactively
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Redesign workflows alongside cost changes
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Measure execution resilience, not just utilization
These companies still adjust workforce size—but less often and with less disruption.
From Right-Sizing to Right-Shaping
The alternative to endless right-sizing is right-shaping.
Right-shaping focuses on:
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Clarifying which work must be internal
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Designing roles around enduring value, not temporary demand
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Creating buffers where uncertainty is highest
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Accepting modest inefficiency to preserve adaptability
This approach trades short-term optimization for long-term stability—a trade many organizations resist until volatility becomes intolerable.
Why This Matters in the Current Cycle
In a low-growth, high-uncertainty environment, workforce volatility is expensive.
Hiring and cutting repeatedly erodes trust, destroys institutional knowledge, and weakens execution. The cost of instability increasingly outweighs the savings from constant adjustment.
Organizations that fail to recognize this will remain trapped in right-sizing loops that consume leadership attention and cultural capital.
Right-sizing never ends because it is solving the wrong problem.
The issue is not that organizations get headcount wrong—it is that they plan for certainty in an uncertain world. As long as workforce design remains rigid and forecasting remains optimistic, volatility will persist.
The next generation of resilient companies will be those that stop chasing the “right” size and start designing for enduring shape—one that absorbs change without constant upheaval.
In 2026, stability is no longer achieved by cutting precisely. It is achieved by designing intelligently.
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FAQs
Why do companies keep right-sizing repeatedly?
Because headcount planning assumes certainty that no longer exists.
Is right-sizing always a failure?
No—but repeated right-sizing signals structural design issues.
Does AI reduce the need for right-sizing?
Not automatically. It often increases short-term volatility.
Why don’t cost cuts create stability?
Because workflows and decision structures remain unchanged.
Can organizations avoid workforce volatility?
They can reduce it significantly through better design.
Is permanent leanness dangerous?
Yes. It reduces resilience and increases fragility.
What should boards ask instead of “How much did we cut?”
“How has the operating model changed?”
Is this trend reversible?
Yes—but only with deliberate organizational redesign.