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AI rollouts often fail when led by IT, who may not understand the sales workflow or speak the same language. Sales Enablement is the ideal function to lead AI adoption because they possess the core competencies of training, methodology implementation, and deep empathy for the seller's day-to-day challenges.

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An effective AI strategy pairs a central task force for enablement—handling approvals, compliance, and awareness—with empowerment of frontline staff. The best, most elegant applications of AI will be identified by those doing the day-to-day work.

For successful enterprise AI implementation, initiatives should not be siloed in the central tech function. Instead, empower operational leaders—like the head of a call center—to own the project. They understand the business KPIs and are best positioned to drive adoption and ensure real-world value.

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You can't delegate AI tool implementation to your sales team or a generalist RevOps person. Success requires a dedicated, technical owner in-house—a 'GTM engineer' or 'AI nerd.' This person must be capable of building complex campaigns and working closely with the vendor's team to train and deploy the agent effectively.

Framing AI adoption as an IT initiative is a critical mistake. IT's role is to ensure security and responsible use, but business leaders must own the transformation. This includes driving strategy, identifying use cases, reskilling talent, and managing the cultural shift.

Sales leaders mistakenly defer AI strategy to technology teams, ceding control of go-to-market efficiency to a department that lacks sales workflow expertise. This is a critical error, as AI adoption is a leadership and workflow issue, not just a technology implementation.

The key to leveraging AI in sales isn't just about learning new tools. It's about embedding AI into the company's culture, making it a natural part of every process from forecasting to customer success. This cultural integration is what unlocks its full potential, moving beyond simple technical usage.

C-suites often delegate AI to the CIO, treating it as a purely technical issue. This fails because true adoption requires business leaders (CMOs, CROs) to become AI-literate and champion use cases within their own departments, democratizing the initiative.

Contrary to the belief that PMs are the earliest tech adopters, go-to-market functions (sales, marketing, support) are leading agent adoption. Their work involves frequently recurring, pattern-based tasks that are a perfect fit for automation, putting them ahead of the curve.