
Many are asking me: “What is an AI Foresight Strategic Advisor?”
An “AI Foresight Strategic Advisor” is not a traditional AI consultant. They do not primarily build models, deploy tools, or optimize workflows. Instead, they operate at a higher level of abstraction: they help organizations anticipate, interpret, and strategically respond to how artificial intelligence will reshape decision-making, markets, and institutional power over time.
At its core, this role sits at the intersection of strategy, systems thinking, and technological foresight. It is less about what AI can do today and more about what AI will mean tomorrow, and how leaders must adapt before those changes become obvious.
The Core Mandate: Navigating the Decision Horizon
AI is not just another technology layer. It is a decision-shaping force. It changes:
- Who makes decisions (humans vs. machines vs. hybrids);
- How decisions are made (data-driven, probabilistic, automated);
- Where authority resides (centralized, distributed, or embedded in systems).
An AI Foresight Strategic Advisor focuses on this shifting terrain, what can be called the “decision horizon.” Their job is to help organizations understand how that horizon is moving and what it implies for leadership, governance, and competitive positioning.
What They Actually Do
1. Interpret AI’s Strategic Trajectory
They analyze how advances in AI, such as generative models, autonomous agents, and decision intelligence systems, are likely to evolve and converge.
This is not trend-watching. It is trajectory mapping:
- What capabilities are emerging?
- What becomes commoditized?
- What becomes a source of power?
2. Identify Decision Displacement and Risk
AI does not just improve decisions: it redistributes them.
An advisor helps organizations identify:
- Where human judgment is being replaced or augmented;
- Where over-reliance on AI may introduce systemic risk;
- Where decision authority may quietly shift away from leadership.
This is especially critical in environments where automation outpaces governance.
3. Redesign Decision Architecture
Rather than focusing only on tools, they focus on decision systems:
- What decisions should remain human-controlled?
- What should be delegated to AI?
- What requires hybrid oversight?
They help design decision rights frameworks that align with strategic intent.
4. Anticipate Second-Order Effects
Most organizations react to first-order benefits (efficiency, cost reduction). Few anticipate second-order consequences:
- Market structure shifts;
- Loss of differentiation due to AI commoditization;
- Institutional fragility from over-automation.
An AI Foresight Strategic Advisor surfaces these downstream effects early, when they are still actionable.
5. Advise Leadership on Strategic Positioning
They work directly with executives to answer questions such as:
- How will AI reshape our industry over the next 5–15 years?
- Where will competitive advantage actually come from?
- What capabilities must we build now to remain relevant?
This is board-level advisory work, not implementation support.
How They Differ from Traditional AI Consultants
The distinction is not subtle: it is structural.
1. Time Horizon: Present vs. Future-Oriented
- AI Consultants: Focus on current capabilities and near-term ROI.
- AI Foresight Strategic Advisors: Focus on long-term structural impact and strategic positioning.
2. Scope: Tools vs. Systems
- AI Consultants: Implement tools, models, and workflows.
- AI Foresight Strategic Advisors: Redesign decision systems, governance structures, and strategic logic.
3. Level of Engagement: Operational vs. Executive
- AI Consultants: Work with product, IT, and operations teams.
- AI Foresight Strategic Advisors: Work with CEOs, boards, and senior leadership.
4. Problem Framing: Efficiency vs. Power
- AI Consultants: Ask “How can AI improve this process?”
- AI Foresight Strategic Advisors: Ask “How does AI change who controls the process, and what that means strategically?”
5. Output: Deliverables vs. Direction
- AI Consultants: Deliver models, dashboards, and implementations.
- AI Foresight Strategic Advisors: Deliver clarity, foresight, and strategic direction.
Why This Role Is Emerging Now
The rise of this role reflects a deeper reality: AI is no longer just a technical domain: it is a strategic and institutional force.
Three dynamics are driving demand:
- Acceleration: AI capabilities are advancing faster than organizations can adapt.
- Opacity: Many AI systems are difficult to fully interpret or govern.
- Consequence: Poor AI decisions can scale rapidly and systemically.
Traditional consulting models, focused on implementation, are insufficient for this environment. Organizations increasingly need interpretation before execution.
The Strategic Value
An AI Foresight Strategic Advisor creates value by helping organizations avoid two common failure modes:
- Underreaction: Treating AI as incremental, missing structural shifts;
- Overreaction: Adopting AI indiscriminately without strategic coherence.
Instead, they enable a third path: deliberate, informed adaptation.
Final Perspective
If AI consultants help organizations use AI, AI Foresight Strategic Advisors help organizations understand what AI will do to them, and what they must become in response.
That distinction is decisive.
In a landscape where decision authority, competitive advantage, and institutional stability are all being reshaped, the organizations that succeed will not be those that adopt AI the fastest, but those that anticipate its implications the most accurately.
J. Michael Dennis ll.l., ll.m.
AI Foresight Strategic Advisor

Based in Kingston Ontario, J. Michael Dennis is a former barrister and solicitor, a Crisis & Reputation Management Expert, a Public Affairs & Corporate Communications Specialist, a Warrior for Common Sense and Free Speech. Today, J. Michael Dennis advise executives, boards, and organizations navigating the strategic uncertainty created by artificial intelligence. J. Michael Dennis’s work focuses on separating real AI capability from hype, identifying long-term risks and opportunities, and helping leaders make clear, responsible decisions in an uncertain technological future.
Contact
jmd@jmichaeldennis.com




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