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By Vicky Sidler | Published 8 September 2025 at 12:00 GMT+2
If your business is circling the AI waters like a nervous swimmer at a pool party, you’re not alone.
A new MIT study dropped a cold truth bomb: 95 percent of AI pilot projects fail. As in, no ROI, no rollout, no value.
Turns out, the problem isn’t the tech—it’s us. Here’s what’s going wrong and how small businesses can get it right.
MIT reports 95 percent of enterprise AI pilots fail to deliver value
Sales and marketing soak up budgets but deliver weak returns
Back-office automation and operations offer the real ROI
Internal-only projects flop twice as often as those with expert partners
Cultural misalignment is the silent killer of adoption
Real success comes from aligning strategy, teams, and tools
Need help getting your message right? Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix.
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FAQs on Why AI Pilots Fail (and How to Avoid It)
What does it mean when an AI pilot “fails”?
Why do so many companies focus on sales and marketing AI tools?
Can small businesses actually afford to use AI?
Should I build AI tools internally or bring in external help?
What role does company culture play in AI adoption?
What’s the biggest mistake businesses make with AI?
What does “integration” mean in this context?
Is this blog against using AI?
Where can I start if I want to get clearer on my messaging before trying AI?
Most AI pilots begin with hype, not a problem. “Let’s use a chatbot” feels more exciting than “Let’s fix our procurement process.”
But front-end tools like chatbots, AI emails, and content generators often backfire, resulting in:
Bland messaging
Poor customer experience
Spam at scale
Meanwhile, the backend—where the actual pain is—gets ignored. MIT found the big wins are hiding in finance, operations, and internal workflows.
Internal builds succeed about 33 percent of the time. Partnered projects? Nearly 67 percent.
Your team knows your business. But experienced partners know the potholes.
Best results come from pairing both. Otherwise, your clever team might build the wrong thing well.
MIT introduces “shadow AI.” Translation: your staff are already using AI tools behind the scenes—whether IT likes it or not.
If your AI rollout doesn’t match how your people actually work, it won’t stick.
That includes:
No training
No team buy-in
One department pushing while others ignore it
Tech adoption is about culture, not capability.
Creating content daily is one of the most time-consuming parts of my marketing. So when AI tools promised to automate scripts, videos, and editing, I tried them all.
They were interesting. But most felt like a weird puppet show pretending to be me.
What I use now:
I still use ChatGPT for idea generation and messy first drafts—though, let’s be honest, it often sounds like a polite robot who’s read too much LinkedIn. So I definitely do a LOT of my own writing to make it sound like “me.”
Krisp.ai filters out my dogs barking and other unwanted background sounds from my audio. Krisp is absolutely FANTASTIC at this, by the way.
Veed.io does a decent first cut of removing bloopers—though Jacques still has to step in, because AI editing is about 80 percent helpful and 20 percent wishing it was human.
And finally we use HighLevel to schedule and distribute the finished content, so things actually go out without someone (me) forgetting.
And yes—I hired a real human to help me publish daily. Hi Jacques.
AI is in the workflow. But it’s not the workflow. It supports the people. It doesn’t replace them.
That balance saves me time without messing with quality or values.
Before you whisper “AI,” figure out what’s actually broken. Slow quotes? Messy onboarding? No follow-up? Start there.
If sales, ops, and marketing aren’t solving the same problem, AI will only speed up the chaos.
Not for lack of brains. For lack of mileage. The right partner avoids rookie mistakes.
If your team doesn’t trust the new tools—or know how to use them—they won’t.
Disconnected AI is just decoration. Connected AI is infrastructure.
AI isn’t the problem. Using it to amplify confusion is.
If your message is unclear, AI will just make it louder. If your systems are broken, AI will speed up the dysfunction. But if your foundation is solid, AI can turn good into great.
Want a simple place to start?
👉 Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix
It’s quick, free, and helps you write a clear one-liner that guides everything from content to customer journeys—even AI.
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This piece explains why people still outperform machines in fast-changing situations—and why you need to keep humans in the loop.
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Before you ask a chatbot for business advice, read this. It unpacks why AI tips helped some small businesses—and hurt others.
It means the project didn’t deliver any measurable value. It might have launched, but it didn’t get used, didn’t improve anything, or never made it past the testing phase. In most cases, failure comes down to poor planning, not bad technology.
Because they’re easier to imagine. Executives understand chatbots and email automation. Operations and finance tools are harder to explain—and often require more upfront work. But MIT’s research shows that the real ROI usually hides in those less-glamorous areas.
Yes, but you need to be smart about it. You don’t need expensive platforms to benefit. Many small businesses already use tools like ChatGPT, Krisp.ai, or Veed.io. The key is to start with a real business problem and choose tech that supports your workflow—not disrupts it.
MIT’s data shows that external partnerships are twice as likely to succeed. Internal teams know the business best, but external experts know how to get tech working across different systems and industries. The best outcomes happen when you combine both.
A big one. If your team doesn’t trust or understand the tool, they won’t use it. Shadow AI (where employees bring in their own tools) shows there’s demand—but official tools often fail when they don’t match how people actually work.
Starting with the tool instead of the problem. If you don’t know what you’re trying to fix, AI becomes a distraction. Success comes from process mapping, team alignment, and clear goals—not flashy demos.
It means embedding AI into your existing systems—CRM, finance, operations—so it works seamlessly as part of your workflow. Tools that sit off to the side, disconnected from how the business runs, rarely deliver long-term value.
Not at all. It’s a call to use AI wisely. When applied with strategy, alignment, and the right cultural support, AI can absolutely improve business outcomes. But it won’t work if you treat it like a magic fix.
Start with your one-liner. If your message isn’t clear, AI tools won’t help—they’ll just confuse people faster.Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix. It’s free and will help you nail down your message in one sharp sentence.
Created with clarity (and coffee)