The AI Ready Organisation: Building the Vision, Foundations, People, and Strategy to Make AI Work

Professor Andy Pardoe's Newest Book

Most AI programmes stall not because of the technology, but because of the organisation around it.

Two years in, with a strategy, a steering committee, a substantial budget, and visible activity, most enterprise AI programmes are still not adopting AI in any way that materially changes how the business runs. The diagnosis is rarely about the AI itself. The diagnosis is structural, cultural, capability-based, and decision-making — and most senior leaders misread it because the symptoms look technical even when the causes are not.

The AI-Ready Organisation is the book about the organisation around the AI.

Drawing on twenty years of building AI capability inside large companies, leading AI delivery in global consulting firms, and advising governments and regulators, Professor Andy Pardoe sets out a working diagnostic frame and a practical operating playbook for senior leaders charged with making AI actually land.


Inside the book

  • The four constraints that produce the AI adoption stall: structure, culture, capability, decision-making. Why they reinforce each other, and why fixing one in isolation rarely works.

  • The three failure modes that recur across stalled programmes: the technology-led programme that builds platforms no-one uses, the strategy-led programme whose dashboards are green while nothing changes, and the bottom-up scatter of two hundred parallel initiatives that never compound.

  • The four pillars of AI-readiness: Prepare and Innovate, Tech and Scaled Delivery, People and Process, and Perspective and Planning. The working definition that the rest of the book builds toward.

  • Operational chapters on where AI sits in the organisation (centralised, federated, hybrid), the Centre of Excellence question, operating model design, the Communities of Practice and Champion network, the cultural conditions that determine whether AI engagement is honest, the workforce conversation that most organisations duck, change management as a discipline tailored to AI adoption, the skills and roles that make a working programme possible, the data and platform foundations that support it, the governance that enables rather than blocks, and the measurement that drives the right behaviours.

  • Three chapters on adapting and sustaining: how the picture differs for generative AI specifically, the vendor and partner strategy that an AI-ready organisation needs in a fast-moving market, and how to keep AI-readiness alive over years rather than treating it as a one-off programme.

  • A complete sixty-four-question AI-Readiness Assessment structured around the four pillars, with interpretation thresholds and an interactive version at ai-ready.info.

  • A toolkit of operational artefacts — the Operating Model on a Page, the Change Management Workstream Design, the Governance Framework Keyed to Risk, and the AI Scorecard for Executive Reporting — that leadership teams can lift and adapt for their own work.


Who this book is for

Senior leaders responsible for making AI deliver real organisational change: Chief AI Officers, Chief Data and AI Officers, Heads of AI, Directors of Transformation, CIOs, COOs, and the boards and senior executives who hold them to account. Partners in consulting firms whose clients are asking them harder AI questions than the AI hype cycle has answered. Senior leaders in regulated industries — financial services, professional services, healthcare, government — where the structural and governance demands of AI adoption are particularly acute.

This is not a book about AI. It is a book about the organisation around the AI — what makes some firms able to absorb AI and others able only to announce it, and what to do if you are running one of the second kind and want to be running one of the first.


Purchase your copy now!

https://amzn.eu/d/00lNJ65x