Every company feels the same pressure right now: do something with AI. So they experiment with tools, launch pilots, announce initiatives; and then in most cases, it goes nowhere.
The reason is simple, even if it's rarely said out loud. AI isn't a strategy. It's a capability. And a capability without a strategy produces activity, not advantage.
The problem: Treating AI as an Initiative
Most companies approach AI with the wrong question. Where can we use it? What tools should we adopt? How do we automate this task or that one? These are reasonable questions. They are also, on their own, the wrong starting point because they are questions about tools, not about outcomes.
The result is predictable: fragmented efforts that never connect to each other, a handful of isolated wins that don't compound and no meaningful change to the business underneath them. Solving for tools produces tool-shaped results. It does not produce transformation.
The Real Issue: Misalignment, Not Technology
AI does not fail because the technology is immature. It fails because the business around it was never built to use it. The operating model wasn't designed for it. The processes weren't structured to leverage it. The teams weren't aligned around what it was supposed to change.
What looks like an AI problem is almost always an alignment problem. And no amount of additional tooling fixes a business that hasn't decided what it's trying to become.
The Shift: From AI Adoption to Applied AI Strategy
At a genuine inflection point, the question changes. It stops being "where can we use AI" and becomes "where does AI fundamentally change how we create value." Those are not the same conversation and the difference between them is the difference between experimentation and transformation.
The first question can be answered by anyone with a vendor list. The second one requires knowing your business well enough to say, specifically, what would change if you took it seriously.
What Changes at the Inflection Point
Three shifts mark the difference between a company that is adopting AI and one that is being transformed by it.
The Reality
AI does not transform companies. Companies that redesign themselves around AI get transformed. The technology is the same for everyone. The outcome depends entirely on whether the business underneath it was built to use it.
The Bottom Line
Most AI strategies fail for a simple reason: they are not strategies. They are collections of experiments with no clear link to revenue, margin or competitive position. Activity that feels like progress without ever quite becoming it.
The question worth asking is not how do we use AI. It's what would our business look like if it had been built with these capabilities from day one and what would it take to become that business now, rather than waiting for someone else to get there first.