Frequently Asked Questions

  • A free, five-minute self-assessment for business owners who've decided AI matters to their future — and want an honest read on where they actually are. You answer questions about how AI shows up in your work, your team, and your client delivery. You get back a report with your readiness score and a clear highest-leverage recommendation based on your specific answers.

  • Business owners and senior leaders who are already bought in on AI — and want to know where they stand compared to what's actually possible. And it's just as useful for anyone on a team who suspects their company is falling behind and wants something concrete to bring to leadership. The questions are calibrated for teams of ten or more. If you're a solo operator, the assessment will still work, but the team-related sections won't be as relevant.

  • About five minutes for the self-assessment, plus ten minutes to read the optional full report. There's no signup wall before you start. You only enter your email at the end if you want the full report sent to your inbox.

  • The assessment measures your company across six dimensions:

    • Individual Amplification

    • Team Process Integration

    • Workflow Automation

    • Augmented Intelligence

    • Autonomous Execution

    • People & Capability

    Together this measures how AI shows up in your strategy, how it shows up in your team's daily work, how it shows up in client delivery, and how prepared your business is to adapt to the AI revolution. Each dimension produces a sub-score, and the report shows you which one is most worth working on first.

  • An AI audit usually focuses on tools and processes: what's installed, what's being used, what's not. An AI adoption assessment focuses on readiness and direction: whether the people, strategy, and operating context are set up to actually benefit from AI investment. The two are complementary, but most businesses should start with the assessment before commissioning an audit, because audits without strategic context tend to produce tool inventories nobody acts on.