To maximize AI's impact, don't just find isolated use cases for content or demand gen teams. Instead, map a core process like a campaign workflow and apply AI to augment each stage, from strategy and creation to localization and measurement. AI is workflow-native, not function-native.

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To successfully automate complex workflows with AI, product teams must go beyond traditional discovery. A "forward-deployed PM" works on-site with customers, directly observing workflows and tweaking AI parameters like context windows and embeddings in real-time to achieve flawless automation.

The most significant productivity gains come from applying AI to every stage of development, including research, planning, product marketing, and status updates. Limiting AI to just code generation misses the larger opportunity to automate the entire engineering process.

Don't just sprinkle AI features onto your existing product ('AI at the edge'). Transformative companies rethink workflows and shrink their old codebase, making the LLM a core part of the solution. This is about re-architecting the solution from the ground up, not just enhancing it.

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").

AI's power is not in creating successful strategies from scratch, but in scaling your existing best practices. An AI agent cannot make a broken process work. First, identify what messaging and campaigns are effective, then use AI to execute them at a near-infinite scale, 24/7.

A critical error in AI integration is automating existing, often clunky, processes. Instead, companies should use AI as an opportunity to fundamentally rethink and redesign workflows from the ground up to achieve the desired outcome in a more efficient and customer-centric way.

Effective AI moves beyond a simple monitoring dashboard by translating intelligence directly into action. It should accelerate work tasks, suggest marketing content, identify product issues, and triage service tickets, embedding it as a strategic driver rather than a passive analytics tool.

The true enterprise value of AI lies not in consuming third-party models, but in building internal capabilities to diffuse intelligence throughout the organization. This means creating proprietary "AI factories" rather than just using external tools and admiring others' success.

The most effective application of AI isn't a visible chatbot feature. It's an invisible layer that intelligently removes friction from existing user workflows. Instead of creating new work for users (like prompt engineering), AI should simplify experiences, like automatically surfacing a 'pay bill' link without the user ever consciously 'using AI.'

To get mainstream users to adopt AI, you can't ask them to learn a new workflow. The key is to integrate AI capabilities directly into the tools and processes they already use. AI should augment their current job, not feel like a separate, new task they have to perform.

Implement AI Horizontally Across Workflows, Not Vertically Within Functional Silos | RiffOn