Services AI Discovery

AI Discovery

Find where AI will actually move your numbers — before you commit a budget.

Process-first, not technology-first
Output is a decision, not a deck
Get in touch →

The problem

"Every vendor starts with their product. We start with your numbers."

The 200-slide deck

Big 4 AI assessments produce extensive frameworks nobody acts on. By the time a recommendation reaches a board, the market has moved.

The pilot that never scales

AI pilots succeed technically and stall commercially. Missing: an honest feasibility assessment and a business case built for the CFO's question, not the engineer's.

Starting with the wrong problem

Most organisations begin with the most visible AI use case — not the highest-value one. The difference between the two can be the difference between a tool and a transformation.

Method

Four phases. One decision.

1

Kick-off & context

Understand the business model, priority metrics, existing data, current pain points. Map the organisational landscape.

2

Process discovery

Interviews with 5–10 business stakeholders (process owners, sales, operations, IT). Map processes, decision flows, data availability, volume of repetitive tasks. Generate a long list of AI candidates.

3

Scoring & prioritisation

Score all candidates against value (impact on your priority metric), feasibility (data, integration, timeline), and time-to-value. Build a ranked opportunity map.

4

Output & delivery

Business cases for the top 3 candidates. Decision brief for CEO/board. Ready to present, ready to decide.

What you get

Facts, not recommendations.

  • AI Opportunity Map

    Full candidate list with scoring rationale — positioned on a value × feasibility matrix.

  • Top-5 ranked opportunities

    Each with scoring rationale, business impact estimate, and feasibility assessment.

  • One-page business case (top 3)

    What it is, what it delivers, what it costs, what it requires. Built for the CFO question.

  • CEO/board decision brief

    3–5 slides. No technical jargon. Ready to present.

Who it's for

The decision owner.

CEO

Owns the revenue or cost line AI would affect. Needs a ranked list and a business case — not a technology roadmap.

CDO

Owns the digital agenda. Needs AI opportunities tied to business metrics, not to model architectures.

COO

Owns operations. Needs to know where repetitive, high-volume decisions can be safely augmented.

Ready to find out where AI will actually move your numbers?

Every engagement starts with a short conversation. No commitment, just specifics.

Let's talk →