Some of the most valuable knowledge inside a company never lived in a handbook. It lived inside people. The sales leader who knows which client concern is fake and which one signals real risk. The operations veteran who can spot a future failure from one odd metric. The nurse, engineer, producer, or manager whose judgment comes from twenty years of accumulated mistakes, patterns, and edge cases.
AI gives companies a way to capture that knowledge before it walks out the door. A firm can now ask a senior employee to let an internal system absorb their reasoning, decisions, language, relationships, and instincts so the company keeps benefiting after they retire or resign. The company will say that is just a smarter version of documentation. The employee may see something very different: not knowledge transfer, but the creation of a permanent asset built from a life’s work.
The conundrum:
There are two legitimate pulls here. A company does invest in the environment where much of that knowledge was formed. It paid the salary, gave access to the clients, built the teams, and took the business risk. From that view, preserving expertise for the next generation is a reasonable extension of the job. But from the worker’s side, salary paid for labor performed in time, not for the right to build a digital stand-in that keeps producing value after the person has left. Once that line disappears, expertise stops being something you carry with you and starts becoming something extracted from you before you go.
So when a person’s years of judgment can be turned into a company asset that keeps working after they leave, what should count as fair: treating that transfer as part of the job the company already paid for, or recognizing an exit value the worker has the right to sell, refuse, or license on their own terms?