
Most AI initiatives do not fail during implementation.
They fail at the moment they are conceived.
The failure begins with a misinterpretation of what AI systems are capable of doing.
Organizations often initiate AI projects under three flawed assumptions:
- That AI systems understand context in a human sense
- That outputs reflect reasoning rather than pattern generation
- That deployment will naturally lead to transformation
None of these assumptions hold under scrutiny.
As a result, initiatives are designed around capabilities that do not exist.
This leads to:
- Poorly scoped projects
- Unrealistic success criteria
- Misaligned expectations across stakeholders
By the time implementation begins, failure is already embedded in the design.
The issue is not technical execution.
It is conceptual framing.
Successful AI strategy begins with constraint, not ambition.
It requires asking:
- What does this system actually do?
- Where does it break down?
- What risks emerge from those limitations?
Only then can a viable use case be defined.
AI does not fail organizations.
Organizations fail to interpret AI.
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.
You must be logged in to post a comment.