Practical AI Roadmap Workbook for Business Executives
A simple, practical workbook showing how AI can truly benefit your business — and where it may not be useful.
The Dev Guys – Mumbai — Smart thinking. Simple execution. Fast delivery.
Why This Workbook Exists
In today’s business world, leaders are often told they must have an AI strategy. AI discussions are happening everywhere—from vendors to competitors. But business heads often struggle between two bad decisions:
• Accepting every proposal and hoping it works out.
• Rejecting all ideas out of fear or uncertainty.
It guides you to make rational decisions about AI adoption without hype or hesitation.
Forget models and parameters — focus on how your business works. AI is only effective when built on your existing processes.
How to Use This Workbook
Work through this individually or with your leadership team. The purpose is reflection, not speed. By the end, you’ll have:
• A short list of meaningful AI opportunities tied to profit or efficiency.
• Understanding of where AI should not be used.
• A clear order of initiatives instead of scattered trials.
Think of it as a guide, not a form. Your AI plan should be simple enough to explain in one meeting.
AI strategy equals good business logic, simply expressed.
Step 1 — Business First
Begin with Results, Not Technology
Most AI discussions begin with tools and tech questions like “Can we use ChatGPT here?” — that’s backward. Instead, begin with clear results that matter to your company.
Ask:
• What top objectives are driving your business now?
• Where are teams overworked or error-prone?
• Where do poor data or slow insights hold back progress?
It should improve something tangible — speed, accuracy, or cost. If an idea doesn’t tie to these, it’s not a roadmap — it’s just an experiment.
Skipping this step leads to wasted tools; doing it right builds power.
Step Two — Map the Workflows
Visualise the Process, Not the Platform
You must see the true flow of tasks, not the idealised version. Pose one question: “What happens between X starting and Y completing?”.
Examples include:
• Lead comes in ? assigned ? follow-up ? quote ? revision ? close/lost.
• Support ticket ? triaged ? answered ? escalated ? resolved.
• Invoice issued ? tracked ? escalated ? payment confirmed.
Every process involves what comes in, what’s done, and what moves forward. Ideal AI zones: messy inputs, repeatable steps, consistent outputs.
Step Three — Choose What Matters
Score AI Use Cases by Impact, Effort, and Risk
Not every use case deserves action; prioritise by impact and feasibility.
Map your ideas to see where to start.
• Quick Wins: easy and powerful.
• Strategic Bets — high impact, high effort.
• Optional improvements with minimal value.
• High cost, low reward — skip them.
Add risk as a filter: where can AI act safely, and where must humans approve?.
Small wins set the foundation for larger bets.
Foundations & Humans
Data Quality Before AI Quality
AI projects fail more from poor data than bad models. Clarity first, automation later.
Design Human-in-the-Loop by Default
AI should draft, suggest, or monitor — not act blindly. Build confidence before full automation.
Common Traps
Steer Clear of Predictable Failures
01. The Demo Illusion — excitement without strategy.
02. The Pilot Problem — learning without impact.
03. The Full Automation Fantasy — imagining instant department replacement.
Choose disciplined execution over hype.
Partnering with Vendors and Developers
Frame problems, don’t build algorithms. State outcomes clearly — e.g., “reduce response time 40%”. Share messy data and edge cases so tech partners understand reality. Agree on success definitions and rollout phases.
Request real-world results, not sales pitches.
Evaluating AI Health
How to Know Your AI Strategy Works
It’s simple, measurable, and owned.
Buzzword-free alignment is visible.
Ownership AI and clarity drive results.
Quick AI Validation Guide
Before any project, confirm:
• Which business metric does this improve?
• Which workflow is involved, and can it be described simply?
• Do we have data and process clarity?
• Who owns the human oversight?
• What is the 3-month metric?
• What’s the fallback insight?
Final Thought
AI should make your business calmer, clearer, and more controlled — not noisier or chaotic. A real roadmap is a disciplined sequence of high-value projects that strengthen your best people. When AI becomes part of your workflow quietly, it stops being hype — it becomes infrastructure.