Assume your organization’s goal is to enhance efficiency and competitiveness through strategic use of AI. Most companies are operating at this fairly generic level right now – and there’s nothing wrong with that, but it’s not enough. If you sharpen this goal and add more concrete details, it will create significantly more clarity, focus, and transparency. Here is an example of how the generic goal outlined above could be broken down at the annual level as a first step:
“We’ve taken a big step in harnessing AI – in terms of market positioning, adaptation of our services, service delivery, and the area of use by our inside sales team alike.”
The following “additions” add more concrete detail on what exactly is behind this:
- We have a compact AI strategy (five standard-size pages max.) that outlines a basic framework for AI adoption by the end of 2025.
- Each organizational unit has identified AI use cases relevant to it and evaluated them in terms of ROI.
- We are perceived on the market as a relevant, forward-looking tech company, and we have 20 products and services relating to AI across all product groups in our portfolio, along with ten published customer references.
- Each product category has reviewed the use of AI for existing services and used the product development process to incorporate it into relevant services where it makes sense to do so.
This allows organizational units and teams to strategically orient themselves toward the objectives, define their own goals, and align those goals with corporate objectives. For example, the HR department could be assigned the goal of reducing processing time for HR processes, and QA could be given the objective of lowering the error rate in a business process. The goals are visible to everyone within the organization and are reviewed and adjusted regularly.