Since AI can deliver results instantly, customers may perceive the output as low-effort and thus low-quality. To combat this, shift the focus from the speed of delivery to the immense effort, experience, and investment required to build the underlying AI system in the first place.
Don't feel pressured to label every AI-powered enhancement as an "AI feature." For example, using AI to generate CSS for a new dark mode is simply a better way to build. The focus should be on the user benefit (dark mode), not the underlying technology, making AI an invisible, powerful tool.
For AI products, the quality of the model's response is paramount. Before building a full feature (MVP), first validate that you can achieve a 'Minimum Viable Output' (MVO). If the core AI output isn't reliable and desirable, don't waste time productizing the feature around it.
Product managers should leverage AI to get 80% of the way on tasks like competitive analysis, but must apply their own intellect for the final 20%. Fully abdicating responsibility to AI can lead to factual errors and hallucinations that, if used to build a product, result in costly rework and strategic missteps.
Moonshot AI overcomes customer skepticism in its AI recommendations by focusing on quantifiable outcomes. Instead of explaining the technology, they demonstrate value by showing clients the direct increase in revenue from the AI's optimizations. Tangible financial results become the ultimate trust-builder.
Focusing on AI for cost savings yields incremental gains. The transformative value comes from rethinking entire workflows to drive top-line growth. This is achieved by either delivering a service much faster or by expanding a high-touch service to a vastly larger audience ("do more").
Customers often rate a service higher if they believe significant effort was expended—a concept called the "illusion of effort." Even if a faster, automated process yields the same result, framing the delivery around the effort invested in creating the system can boost perceived quality.
Users mistakenly evaluate AI tools based on the quality of the first output. However, since 90% of the work is iterative, the superior tool is the one that handles a high volume of refinement prompts most effectively, not the one with the best initial result.
The primary ROI of sales AI isn't just saved time, but the reallocation of that time. Evaluate and justify AI tools based on their ability to maximize Customer Facing Time (CFT), as this directly increases both the quantity and quality of customer interactions, leading to better performance.
While AI offers efficiency gains, its true marketing potential is as a collaborative partner. This "designed intelligence" approach uses AI for scale and data processing, freeing humans for creativity, connection, and building empathetic customer experiences, thus amplifying human imagination rather than just automating tasks.
The true ROI of AI isn't just efficiency; it's the opportunity to reallocate time from low-value tasks to uniquely human activities. Use the bandwidth gained to build deeper client relationships, foster community, and engage in creative work.