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Artificial intelligence has quickly moved from a buzzword to a practical tool for many businesses. But adoption doesn’t look the same across the board for small and mid-sized companies.
Some organizations are experimenting with AI, while others are still trying to understand where AI fits into their day-to-day operations.
What’s clear is that AI is not a one-size-fits-all solution. Its value and risks depend heavily on how it’s used, the industry involved, and how well teams are prepared to work with it.
AI is proving useful as a kind of translator. Businesses have always had access to vast amounts of information through search engines, but sorting through it takes time. AI tools can take complex or scattered data and present it in a more digestible way.
For many business owners, this means faster insights. Instead of combing through multiple sources, they can ask a question and receive a summarized response that helps them prepare for decisions, conversations, or further research.
That doesn’t mean AI is replacing expertise. Rather, it’s acting as a first pass by helping users get oriented before engaging with accountants, attorneys, or other advisors.
Not all businesses are moving at the same pace. Technology-focused companies tend to be further along, sometimes integrating AI directly into workflows. In these environments, AI may handle initial tasks, with employees reviewing and refining the output.
Other industries are taking a slower approach. Many are still exploring basic use cases like drafting communications, assisting with HR questions, or analyzing internal data. For these businesses, the challenge isn’t just implementation; it’s identifying where AI actually adds value.
As adoption grows, organizations need to establish clear guidelines around AI use.
Without a policy, employees may experiment in ways that create unintended risks, especially when it comes to sensitive data. Many AI platforms use inputs to improve their models, which means information entered into these systems could potentially be stored or reused.
For example, uploading financial statements, legal documents, or internal reports into a public AI tool may expose information that was never meant to leave the organization.
An effective AI policy should outline:
Some companies may consider restricting access to certain tools altogether. However, that approach can also limit potential gains in productivity and efficiency. The goal is not to block usage entirely, but to guide it responsibly.
Even with a policy in place, AI is not a plug-and-play solution. These tools require a level of understanding to be used effectively.
Training helps employees move beyond surface-level use. It should cover:
Without this foundation, results can be inconsistent. With it, teams can begin to use AI as a meaningful support tool rather than a novelty.
AI can be impressive, but it is far from perfect. One of the most important realities for businesses to recognize is that AI can produce inaccurate or entirely fabricated information, often delivered with complete confidence.
These errors, sometimes referred to as “hallucinations,” occur because AI models rely on patterns and probabilities rather than true understanding. They predict what should come next in a sequence of words, which can lead to convincing but incorrect outputs.
For that reason, human oversight remains an important part of any AI-driven process. Users need to approach results with a level of skepticism and verify information before relying on it.
Another area generating interest is whether AI use connects to research and development activities.
Using AI alone does not automatically qualify as R&D. However, it can play a role in supporting innovation. For example, businesses exploring new processes, improving designs, or solving technical challenges may use AI as part of their broader efforts.
In these cases, AI acts as a tool within the process—not the process itself.
AI presents real opportunities for small and mid-sized businesses, but those opportunities come with responsibility. Companies that take a thoughtful approach by developing policies, investing in training, and maintaining oversight are better positioned to benefit from what these tools offer.
Rather than viewing AI as either a game-changer or a passing trend, it’s more productive to see it as a developing capability. Its impact will continue to evolve, and businesses that stay informed and adaptable will be in the strongest position to make the most of it.
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