AI strategy and roadmap: a plan, not a wish list
Tie AI to real goals and ignore the rest. A practical plan that says what to do first, what to leave alone, and why.
Once you know AI is worth pursuing, the next trap is doing too much at once and chasing whatever is in the headlines that week. A good AI strategy is the opposite of that. It is a short, prioritised plan that connects AI to the goals you already care about, decides what to do in what order, and builds in the guardrails from the start.
This is for businesses that are past “should we bother” and now want a clear, sensible path forward without betting the company on it.
What an AI strategy with me looks like
- Goals first. We start with what the business is trying to achieve, then ask where AI genuinely moves the needle.
- A prioritised roadmap. The opportunities ranked by value and effort, sequenced so you get useful wins early.
- Build, buy or wait. An honest call on each idea: use an off-the-shelf tool, build something, or leave it for now.
- Guardrails built in. Data protection and governance considered from the outset, not bolted on later.
- A way to measure. Clear signs of whether each step is working, so you can keep going or stop with confidence.
Why a roadmap keeps you sane
The fastest way to waste money on AI is to react to every new announcement. A roadmap gives you a reason to say “not now” to the noise and “yes” to the few things that matter. It turns a stressful, open-ended topic into a manageable list.
Advice, then delivery
The strategy is advisory work. When the plan calls for building, integrating or automating, I can bring in a delivery partner I trust, including my own agency FullyCoded, while I keep steering the direction.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is this different from the readiness assessment?
The readiness assessment answers “is AI worth it and where.” The strategy and roadmap answers “given that, what do we do, in what order, and how do we keep it safe.” Many clients do the assessment first.
How do you decide what to prioritise?
By weighing genuine value against effort and risk, and favouring quick, low-risk wins that build confidence before bigger moves.
Do we need a lot of data or data scientists to have an AI strategy?
No. Plenty of valuable AI use needs neither. Where data or specialist skills are genuinely required, the roadmap will say so honestly rather than assuming it.
How do you stop us chasing every shiny new tool?
That is half the point of having a roadmap. It gives you a clear basis for saying no, so attention and budget go to the things that actually matter.
Will a strategy lock us into one vendor?
No. I am vendor-neutral, and a good roadmap keeps your options open rather than tying you to a single platform.
How often should the roadmap be revisited?
AI moves quickly, so a light review every few months is sensible. The goals change slowly; the tools change fast, and the plan should flex with them.