Six core practice areas, each built around a specific dimension of enterprise AI value. Every engagement draws from multiple areas — we scope based on where the highest-leverage opportunities are for your organization.
Most enterprise AI strategies fail before a single model is deployed. They're too broad, too aspirational, and disconnected from the specific business levers that actually drive financial performance. We build AI strategies differently.
Our process begins with a rigorous diagnostic of your organization's AI readiness across five dimensions: data maturity, technical infrastructure, talent density, organizational culture, and competitive context. This is not a survey — it's a structured assessment conducted by principals with pattern recognition across hundreds of enterprise environments.
The output is a prioritized AI roadmap anchored to specific P&L line items. Every use case is mapped to a measurable outcome, a realistic timeline, a resource requirement, and a risk profile. Your CFO will be able to evaluate it. Your CTO will be able to execute it. Your board will be able to approve it.
Large language models are the most consequential technology infrastructure decision most organizations will make this decade. Getting the implementation right — model selection, fine-tuning approach, retrieval architecture, safety controls, serving infrastructure — requires engineering expertise that is genuinely scarce.
We have deployed LLMs in production across financial services, healthcare, legal, retail, and industrial environments. We know where the standard approaches break down, which model families perform best in regulated contexts, and how to design architectures that scale without degrading in accuracy or compliance posture.
Our agent systems practice extends this capability to multi-step, autonomous workflows. We design agentic systems with the guardrails and observability that enterprise environments require — not demonstrations that work in controlled conditions, but systems that operate reliably in the unpredictability of real business operations.
When a buyer asks ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Claude which vendor to consider in your category, what happens? For most organizations, the honest answer is: they don't know. That is the most dangerous gap in their go-to-market strategy.
AI Visibility is the emerging discipline of ensuring your brand, expertise, and positioning are accurately represented across AI-generated answers. It's distinct from traditional SEO — the underlying mechanics, the content signals that matter, and the measurement frameworks are fundamentally different. Most organizations are invisible in the AI discovery layer without realizing it.
Our AI Visibility program begins with a comprehensive audit across the major AI platforms, establishing a baseline of your current citation frequency, sentiment, accuracy, and competitive positioning. We then implement a systematic program to improve each dimension — and we measure the results with the same rigor we apply to any revenue-generating initiative.
For organizations in regulated industries — banking, insurance, healthcare, legal, government — AI governance is not optional. It's the prerequisite for AI programs that can scale. The organizations that build governance correctly from the beginning move faster, not slower.
Our governance practice has deep expertise in model risk management (SR 11-7 and equivalent frameworks), EU AI Act compliance, HIPAA-constrained AI deployments, and fair lending implications of algorithmic decision systems. We've stood up governance programs that have passed regulatory examination without findings.
Governance is not a final chapter in an AI program — it's infrastructure that runs throughout. We design governance frameworks that are rigorous enough to satisfy regulators and lightweight enough to not obstruct the pace of AI development your organization needs.
The most sophisticated AI system in the world fails if your organization doesn't adopt it. Workforce enablement is not a training program — it's a change management discipline that requires understanding how people actually work, what they're worried about, and how to integrate AI tools into existing workflows without creating friction.
We design enablement programs at three levels: executive (strategic AI literacy and decision-making frameworks), manager (AI-augmented team operations and performance management), and practitioner (hands-on AI tool proficiency and workflow integration). Each level has distinct content, distinct formats, and distinct success metrics.
Our programs are built on behavioral science principles, not generic "AI 101" curricula. We measure adoption, not attendance. We track productivity changes, not completion rates. And we iterate the program based on what the data tells us isn't working.
Most enterprise AI programs underperform not because the models are wrong but because the data infrastructure underneath them is inadequate. Fragmented data pipelines, poor data quality, missing feature engineering, and inadequate model serving infrastructure are the actual failure modes — not model architecture decisions.
Our data and ML infrastructure practice addresses these foundations directly. We design and implement data pipelines, feature stores, vector databases, model registries, and serving layers that give your AI programs the reliable substrate they need to perform in production.
We are technology-agnostic — we evaluate and recommend across the full spectrum of cloud-native and on-premise tooling based on your specific requirements, existing investments, and operational constraints. We do not have vendor partnerships that bias our recommendations.
That's exactly what our initial briefing is for. We'll diagnose where the highest leverage is for your specific organization and recommend where to begin.