Why Your AI Push Did Not Work
You pushed AI tools to your team six months ago. A few people are using them occasionally. Most are not. The ones who are not using them have reasons that sound reasonable. The real reason they are not using AI is not that they do not understand it. It is that you did not change the work, so the work did not change. AI adoption happens when the work changes to include it, not when tools are made available.
Step One: Find the One Task That Takes Too Long
Before you roll out AI to the team, find the one task that takes the most time that is also the most repetitive. Not the most important task. The most time-consuming and repetitive one. This is where AI will show the fastest return and face the least resistance. If you start with something complex or important, the learning curve will create pushback. Start with the task everyone dreads.
Step Two: Get One Person to Prove It Works
Find the person on the team who is most likely to try something new. Not the most senior. The one who is curious. Have them use AI for that task for two weeks and measure the time. If they save two hours in week one, the team will believe it. If they do not save time, you have the wrong task or the wrong tool. Fix the problem before you scale.
Step Three: Make It Part of the Process, Not an Option
Once you have proof it works, make AI use part of the standard process for that task. Not a suggestion. Part of the definition of done. If someone is not using AI for that task, they need to explain why in the same way they would explain why they skipped a required step. The process change is what makes adoption stick.
Step Four: Expand to the Next Task
After the first task is consistently using AI, expand to the next task that fits the criteria. Time-consuming and repetitive. Do not try to move AI into everything at once. The goal is not to use AI. The goal is to make the work better. AI is a tool that makes specific tasks faster. It is not a philosophy.
