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Here’s how to jump-start your company’s AI transformation in 90 days

AI is already transforming how organizations operate, compete, and create value, and adoption is accelerating across industries. Businesses that are experimenting with AI and learning how to move from initial ideas to deployment are building the infrastructure to deliver value both now and in the future. Those that are waiting—for the technology to mature, for conditions to stabilize, for someone else to figure it out first—risk finding that a competitor has upended their market before they’ve even begun adapting to this new era.

Given the current chaos in global markets and geopolitics, the temptation to avoid change and pursue a defensive strategy is strong. But it must be resisted. Organizations that gain ground now will be difficult to catch. Those that fall behind may find that they’ve missed their chance for good. A strong innovation pipeline is more important today than ever before.

The Four Pillars

Innovation efforts fail for predictable reasons that rarely have anything to do with the quality of available ideas or technology. Instead, these efforts fail because the conditions needed to sustain them aren’t in place. Those conditions rest on four pillars.

Leadership mindset. The biggest barrier to innovation isn’t budget or technological capability—it’s the mindset of the leadership team. Leaders tend to look for stability and certainty when making decisions. Yet instability and change are the default conditions of the AI age, and senior executives need to adapt to this new reality.

Organizational design. This is the pillar that gets overlooked most often, and it’s the one that most frequently determines whether innovation programs succeed or fail. If a transformational approach to innovation is to take root, then reporting lines must value experimentation over immediate returns and incentive structures must not punish risk-taking. Decision rights must also be unambiguous across the organization.

Capital allocation. Innovating through uncertainty doesn’t necessarily mean spending more, but it does mean spending deliberately—starting from strategic priorities and then holding every dollar accountable through a stage-gated approach to funding that rewards progress and kills inertia.

The innovation pipeline. Most organizations have a portfolio problem, not an idea problem. They either bet everything on one transformative initiative or they scatter resources across dozens of underfunded experiments. What they need instead is a balanced portfolio of bets with explicit mechanisms for deciding what moves forward.

These four foundations are the basis for every phase of the 90-day plan that follows.

The 90-Day Plan

Days 1-30: Diagnose

The goal of this phase is clarity. You can’t build what you can’t see, and most organizations have never taken a systematic look at where they stand when it comes to their capacity for innovation.

1. Start with purpose, not technology. The most common mistake in AI adoption is asking What can AI do? instead of What problems are preventing us from achieving our strategic goals, and could AI help solve any of them? Begin by reaffirming your organizational purpose, mapping your strategic priorities, and then working backward to identify bottlenecks and points of friction. At this point, you can start thinking about how AI might solve these problems. The output of this step is a ranked list of opportunities grounded in what your organization is trying to achieve.

This step follows the Outline phase of the OPEN framework for AI innovation.

2. Diagnose your organization’s relationship to change. Culture is the primary barrier to AI transformation, so before you invest in tools, assess the environment those tools will be deployed into. Determine whether your organization treats AI as a legitimate business tool or a sign of questionable practice, and whether your frontline teams have ideas for AI applications that nobody has thought to ask them about. This diagnostic will tell you whether your culture will support what you’re about to build. If the answers you get are uncomfortable, solving these cultural issues must be a priority.

3. Audit your current innovation activity and spend. Inventory every experiment, pilot, and stalled initiative, then map every innovation dollar being spent. Flag anything that’s being funded out of inertia rather than strategy—the endlessly “almost ready” pilot or the expensive software subscription that nobody uses. This audit gives you two things: a clear picture of what you’re doing and spending right now, and the raw material for the capital allocation decisions that come later.

For a detailed example of a thorough baseline assessment, see our practical playbook for AI innovation pipelines.

4. Map your decision rights. This is where organizational design enters the picture. You need clear answers to five questions: Who approves a new experiment? Who decides when a project advances to the next stage? Who can reallocate budget between initiatives? Who has the authority to kill a failing project? And who can request resources across functions? If the answers are ambiguous—and in most organizations they will be—then every innovation project you launch is structurally vulnerable. An accurate decision rights matrix is the structural precondition for everything that follows.

Days 31-50: Organize

The ground is mapped. Now it’s time to build the machinery that will sustain innovation over the long term. This phase is about putting the human and organizational infrastructure in place so when experiments begin, they have the support they need to succeed.

1. Establish ownership and structure. Someone needs to own the innovation pipeline, with explicit authority to allocate resources, kill underperforming projects, and escalate blockers. The best approach is to create a central point of accountability that sets standards and can take a unified view of the portfolio paired with leads embedded in each function or business unit who own execution in their area.

2. Realign incentives. If managers’ performance is measured exclusively on quarterly delivery and cost efficiency, they will never protect innovation spend. Changing behavior means changing incentives. Tie a part of the leadership evaluation to innovation pipeline health. Measure active experiments running, the speed at which failing projects are identified and killed, stage-gate throughput, and willingness to support experimentation. The organizational culture you diagnosed in Phase 1 won’t change because you’ve drawn a new org chart. It will change because you’ve changed what the organization values.

3. Establish a recurring innovation rhythm. Set up a weekly session: 30 minutes, with nonnegotiable attendance from senior leadership. That forces forward-looking thinking into the calendar. When uncertainty dominates, every meeting becomes reactive. This weekly session is a counterweight to that tendency, a protected space for reviewing emerging opportunities that builds the habit of treating innovation as an ongoing discipline.

Days 51-70: Prepare

The infrastructure is in place. Now build your portfolio of AI initiatives and get your first cohort of projects ready to launch.

1. Structure your opportunities as a portfolio. Take the ranked list of opportunities from the Diagnose phase and score them against five criteria: strategic alignment, feasibility, cost, risk, and potential value. The core principle is straightforward: Treat your AI initiatives as an interconnected investment portfolio, not a to-do list. You want a deliberate mix across time horizons—quick wins that can demonstrate value within weeks alongside medium-term projects that require deeper integration and longer-term bets that could reshape the business.

For the detailed stage-gate portfolio methodology, see this framework for managing AI innovation.

2. Determine and allocate capital on a purpose-driven basis. Start from your strategic priorities and work forward. Ask what level of investment your innovation portfolio actually requires to deliver against your goals. That number may be more than is currently budgeted. If so, confront that gap honestly. The question isn’t How do we spread what we have across these projects? It’s What do we need to invest to remain competitive, and how do we fund that? Once the total budget is determined, allocate it across the portfolio with clear stage gates. No project gets its next tranche of funding without hitting defined milestones.

3. Design your first cohort of experiments. Select the three to five highest-scoring quick wins from the portfolio and design each one for launch. Every experiment needs an owner, a budget, a timeline, a success metric, and a defined milestone at which it will be evaluated. Structure each experiment as a learning journey—you’re testing not just whether the technology works but whether people adopt it and what organizational capabilities it requires.

Days 71-90: Ignite

The machinery is built. The portfolio is structured. Now light the fuse and lock in the governance processes that will enable the system to sustain itself.

1. Launch your first experiments. Get your first cohort of bounded, measurable AI experiments into motion. Early visible results are the single most powerful antidote to organizational paralysis—they demonstrate that innovation is possible, that AI can deliver tangible value, and that the system you’ve built actually works. Pay attention to what breaks. That information is as valuable as the experiment results themselves.

2. Establish mechanisms for long-term operation. As you launch your first experiments, establish the governance structures that will sustain the pipeline beyond the initial 90-day push. First, innovation pipeline health becomes a standing agenda item in senior leadership meetings—not an annual innovation day or a quarterly update buried in a strategy deck. Second, stage-gate discipline is fully embedded: Every innovation investment requires a gate review at each stage—no exceptions. Third, design and schedule the quarterly portfolio review process that will become the engine for continuous improvement.

3. Stress-test your organizational design. Take stock of what the first 70 days have taught you about your own structure. Are the decision rights working in practice, or are decisions still getting stuck? Is the ownership model delivering both coherence and relevance, or has it become a bottleneck? Are the incentive changes having the intended effect on behavior? Is the culture beginning to shift, or are the old defaults reasserting themselves? This isn’t a onetime fix. It’s a system that needs continuous tuning. But by day 90, the system should exist and be operating, even if imperfectly.

4. Begin the second cycle. In your quarterly review, ask: What worked? What didn’t? What scales? What gets killed? What have we learned about our organization’s capacity to support AI innovation? Feed the answers back into the pipeline. Replenish the portfolio with fresh opportunities. Assess whether the balance across time horizons is right. The 90 days were the ignition. This first review is the beginning of the ongoing engine.

Conclusion

This plan won’t transform your organization in 90 days. But it will jump-start its journey toward AI transformation. At the end of the period, you’ll have a functioning innovation pipeline and a portfolio of AI initiatives, your first experiments will be in motion, and the governance machinery to sustain continuous innovation will be in place. The 90-day plan is just the key to the ignition. After that, the road is all yours.


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