Most AI roadmaps look impressive.
Pilots are underway. Copilots are deployed. Budgets are allocated. Boards are informed. And yet, very few organizations are seeing sustained, enterprise-level impact.
In my recent conversation with Ross Crooke, SVP, BTS Europe, and Fredrik Schuller, EVP and Global Head of Centers of Excellence at BTS, one theme surfaced repeatedly: AI is not stalling because of technology. It is stalling because of leadership.
The first wave of AI adoption has centered on personal productivity. As Ross noted, organizations are seeing strong uptake in tools like Copilot, ChatGPT, and Claude. Individuals are drafting faster, researching faster, synthesizing faster.
That matters. But personal productivity rarely redesigns work. It improves tasks without challenging structure.
The organizations moving ahead are doing something harder. They are giving teams both permission and responsibility to experiment. As Ross put it, if leaders limit teams to a single top-down tool, they unintentionally constrain creativity. AI maturity requires confidence at the front lines, not just compliance.
That is where many roadmaps quietly stall.
The conversation shifted when Fredrik reframed the issue. AI expands what is possible. The real question is whether leaders are clear about what is desirable and impactful. Without that clarity, AI becomes fragmented. Teams optimize locally. Enterprise transformation never materializes.
The difference between acceleration and reinvention lies in outcomes.
When organizations stop asking how to automate current workflows and start asking what outcomes need to be reimagined, productivity gains compound. Fredrik described teams completing projects with smaller groups, lower risk, improved quality, and dramatically shorter cycle times. In some cases, productivity improvements are measured in multiples, not percentages.
That kind of change does not come from incremental tool adoption. It comes from redesign. And redesign exposes a deeper constraint: management systems.
Many organizations still reward delivery over evolution. Yet, as Fredrik emphasized, breakthroughs come through retooling and iteration. Leaders must clear obstacles rather than control outcomes. They must create space for experimentation without sacrificing accountability.
This is the inflection point.
Some debate whether AI will produce meaningful productivity gains at scale. Ross is clear that the “productivity paradox” narrative does not match what he is seeing. Where workflows are redesigned, gains are significant. Where AI is layered onto existing processes, impact plateaus.
That is the dividing line. The question facing leaders is no longer which tool to standardize on. It is this: Where are we willing to rethink how work gets done?
Organizations that treat AI as a software rollout will see incremental gains. Organizations that treat AI as an operating model shift will redefine performance.
If this tension reflects what you are seeing internally, I encourage you to watch the full discussion with Ross Crooke and Fredrik Schuller. The examples and insights go deeper into how organizations are moving from isolated pilots to enterprise reinvention.
You can access the session here.
AI is not waiting.
The question is whether leadership is.
