Know Your AI Maturity. Move Forward With Confidence.
Assess your organisation's AI readiness across the capabilities that matter most, identify the biggest blockers, and get a clear roadmap to scale AI safely and effectively.
Most organisations are under pressure to "do something with AI" but lack a clear baseline for where they stand today. The Organisation AI Maturity Assessment gives leadership teams an objective, structured view of current AI readiness, so they can prioritise the right investments, reduce delivery risk, and accelerate measurable business outcomes.
Create a shared baseline
Replace opinion-driven debates with a consistent maturity view across business, technology, and operations stakeholders.
Prioritise highest-impact gaps
Identify the capability gaps most likely to slow AI delivery, increase risk, or reduce ROI, then focus resources where they matter.
De-risk AI scale-up
Surface governance, data, and operating model weaknesses early so teams can strengthen foundations before scaling use cases.
The Problem with AI Readiness Today
Most organisations are spending on AI. Fewer know whether it's working.
Everyone's Adopting. Few Are Ready.
The readiness gap
"AI crossed 1.2 billion users in under three years – faster than smartphones or the web."
Speed of adoption doesn't mean readiness. Without a structured way to assess capability across your organisation, AI initiatives stay fragmented – a tool here, a pilot there, no coherent strategy.
Pilots That Don't Scale
The execution gap
"Only 30% of AI pilots progress to full-scale deployment."
The pattern is familiar: a successful proof of concept, enthusiastic early adopters, then stalling. The gap isn't technical – it's organisational. Governance, talent, change management, and data quality determine whether AI scales or stays experimental.
Investment Without Measurement
The ROI gap
"73% of organisations report difficulty quantifying the return on AI initiatives."
Boards are asking hard questions about AI spend. If you can't measure readiness, you can't demonstrate progress. If you can't demonstrate progress, investment dries up – regardless of the potential.
You Don't Need to Build AI. You Need to Adopt It Well.
The capability gap
"South Korea didn't invent semiconductors – it mastered and scaled them, transforming its economy."
The competitive advantage isn't in building frontier models. It's in building the organisational capability to adopt, integrate, and get value from AI. That's a people and process challenge, not a technology one.
The Seven Building Blocks of AI Readiness
True AI readiness isn't just about technology or skills—it's a holistic system. Our assessment evaluates your organisation across seven interdependent dimensions, each critical to sustainable AI success.
Strategy & Governance
A clear, organisation-wide vision for AI that aligns with long-term business goals and includes leadership buy-in, policy frameworks, and strategic alignment.
Without a shared vision and leadership commitment, AI initiatives remain fragmented. Strategic alignment fosters prioritisation, funding, and sustainable adoption.
Strategy & Governance
A clear, organisation-wide vision for AI that aligns with long-term business goals and includes leadership buy-in, policy frameworks, and strategic alignment.
Without a shared vision and leadership commitment, AI initiatives remain fragmented. Strategic alignment fosters prioritisation, funding, and sustainable adoption.
Level 1: Exploratory
AI initiatives are fragmented and opportunistic. There is no strategic direction or leadership involvement in AI. Governance mechanisms do not exist.
Level 2: Foundational
Initial awareness at leadership level. Some early discussions on AI strategy. A few individuals champion AI efforts, but no formal governance exists.
Level 3: Structured
A formal AI strategy and policy framework is defined. Leadership buy-in is secured. Governance structures are established, though may still be evolving.
Level 4: Integrated
AI strategy aligns with broader organisational strategy. AI governance is mature and embedded in decision-making processes across units.
Level 5: Transformative
AI is central to long-term strategic planning. Executive leadership prioritises AI innovation. Governance is agile and continuously evolving to support AI-driven transformation.
Organisation & Talent
The structure, roles, and skills necessary to drive AI success, including upskilling efforts, Centers of Excellence (CoEs), and cross-functional collaboration.
Even with the right data and technology, success depends on a workforce that understands and can operationalise AI.
Organisation & Talent
The structure, roles, and skills necessary to drive AI success, including upskilling efforts, Centers of Excellence (CoEs), and cross-functional collaboration.
Even with the right data and technology, success depends on a workforce that understands and can operationalise AI.
Level 1: Exploratory
No formal AI roles or teams. Efforts depend on individual enthusiasts. No upskilling initiatives in place.
Level 2: Foundational
Initial AI roles and responsibilities are defined. Early CoEs or working groups may emerge. Some upskilling or awareness programs initiated.
Level 3: Structured
Dedicated AI teams are formed. CoEs guide practices. Upskilling is systematic and competency-based. Organisational structures begin supporting AI workflows.
Level 4: Integrated
AI capabilities are embedded into key departments. Talent strategy aligns with AI roadmap. CoEs evolve into enterprise hubs for AI excellence.
Level 5: Transformative
A learning organisation model is adopted. Cross-functional teams innovate continuously. AI expertise is institutionalised and sustainable.
Data, Infrastructure & Security
The foundation of AI success — covering data quality, availability, governance, infrastructure, security and cloud or on-premise compute capabilities.
AI depends on reliable, well-governed secure data and scalable infrastructure. Gaps here lead to poor model performance and high operational risk.
Data, Infrastructure & Security
The foundation of AI success — covering data quality, availability, governance, infrastructure, security and cloud or on-premise compute capabilities.
AI depends on reliable, well-governed secure data and scalable infrastructure. Gaps here lead to poor model performance and high operational risk.
Level 1: Exploratory
Data is siloed, unstructured, and not AI-ready. Infrastructure for AI is largely absent.
Level 2: Foundational
Data access improves. Cloud or basic platforms adopted. First investments in AI tools and infrastructure made.
Level 3: Structured
Data management policies are defined. Common tooling standards adopted. Secure compute and API capabilities available.
Level 4: Integrated
Data pipelines, APIs, and tools are standardised across units. Cloud-native infrastructure is mature and AI-ready.
Level 5: Transformative
Advanced platforms support real-time AI use cases. Infrastructure is scalable, adaptive, and supports innovation.
AI Lifecycle & Operations
The end-to-end management of AI models — from development and testing to deployment, monitoring, and continuous improvement via MLOps.
AI is not a one-time deployment. Lifecycle maturity enables scalable, reliable, and sustainable AI operations across the organisation.
AI Lifecycle & Operations
The end-to-end management of AI models — from development and testing to deployment, monitoring, and continuous improvement via MLOps.
AI is not a one-time deployment. Lifecycle maturity enables scalable, reliable, and sustainable AI operations across the organisation.
Level 1: Exploratory
Ad-hoc model development. No defined lifecycle or reuse. Lack of deployment standards.
Level 2: Foundational
Basic lifecycle stages defined. Initial practices in model versioning, testing. Some deployments in production.
Level 3: Structured
Formal lifecycle with defined processes. MLOps pipelines introduced. Reuse, retraining, and governance mechanisms adopted.
Level 4: Integrated
AI models are monitored and retrained routinely. Lifecycle automation exists. Deployment across units follows common standards.
Level 5: Transformative
Lifecycle is dynamic, self-optimising. AI operations are continuous and responsive. Models drive strategic value across domains.
Ethics, Risk & Compliance
The governance, risk mitigation, and ethical practices required to ensure fair, safe, and legally compliant AI systems.
Unchecked AI can amplify bias, erode trust, or violate laws. Governance and compliance frameworks mitigate these risks.
Ethics, Risk & Compliance
The governance, risk mitigation, and ethical practices required to ensure fair, safe, and legally compliant AI systems.
Unchecked AI can amplify bias, erode trust, or violate laws. Governance and compliance frameworks mitigate these risks.
Level 1: Exploratory
No awareness of AI risk or ethics. Models are built without considering impact, bias, or transparency.
Level 2: Foundational
Initial ethical discussions begin. Basic compliance checks introduced. Early risk identification processes explored.
Level 3: Structured
Defined ethical principles guide model development. Governance around compliance and safety is in place.
Level 4: Integrated
Ethics and compliance are embedded in workflows. AI systems audited regularly. Risk mitigation is proactive.
Level 5: Transformative
Ethical AI is a core value. Organisation sets benchmarks and leads on compliance innovation. Trust and accountability are measurable outcomes.
Impact & Value Realisation
The ability to measure, track, and demonstrate tangible business value from AI initiatives, including ROI, KPI alignment, and use case scalability.
The real value of AI lies in outcomes. Organisations must close the feedback loop and ensure initiatives deliver measurable impact.
Impact & Value Realisation
The ability to measure, track, and demonstrate tangible business value from AI initiatives, including ROI, KPI alignment, and use case scalability.
The real value of AI lies in outcomes. Organisations must close the feedback loop and ensure initiatives deliver measurable impact.
Level 1: Exploratory
AI use cases are ad-hoc, with no ROI tracking. Success is anecdotal.
Level 2: Foundational
Use cases are prioritised informally. Some KPIs are defined. ROI tracking begins on select initiatives.
Level 3: Structured
Clear frameworks for use case selection and evaluation. Measurable outcomes tracked. Initial scale achieved.
Level 4: Integrated
AI projects aligned with business goals. Value metrics tracked consistently. Use case pipeline scales across departments.
Level 5: Transformative
AI consistently drives measurable value and innovation. Decision-making is data-driven. ROI is optimised across portfolios.
Change & Adoption
The ability to help people embrace new ways of working and make AI stick through effective change management and fostering adoption across the organisation.
Even the best AI strategy and technology will fail without organisational buy-in and user adoption. Change management ensures smooth transitions and sustainable AI integration into daily operations.
Change & Adoption
The ability to help people embrace new ways of working and make AI stick through effective change management and fostering adoption across the organisation.
Even the best AI strategy and technology will fail without organisational buy-in and user adoption. Change management ensures smooth transitions and sustainable AI integration into daily operations.
Level 1: Exploratory
Limited awareness of AI initiatives. No formal change management or adoption strategies.
Level 2: Foundational
Initial communication plans developed. Some training sessions held. Early adopters identified.
Level 3: Structured
Formal change management processes in place. Comprehensive training programs established. Adoption metrics tracked.
Level 4: Integrated
Change management is embedded in project lifecycles. Broad user adoption achieved. Culture supports AI innovation.
Level 5: Transformative
Organisation is agile and adaptive to AI-driven change. Continuous learning culture thrives. AI adoption is a competitive advantage.
These seven dimensions are interdependent. Strong technology without governance leads to risk. Clear strategy without talent leads to execution gaps. Good data without impact measurement leads to wasted potential. PATHVAI assesses your organisation holistically across all dimensions.
Who Uses PATHVAI
Designed for teams and leaders responsible for turning AI ambition into measurable business outcomes.
Business Leaders
Get a clear, board-ready view of your AI maturity and a focused improvement path tied to strategic outcomes.
Transformation and Innovation Teams
Pinpoint where capability friction is occurring and align cross-functional stakeholders on practical next steps.
Data and Technology Leaders
Understand whether your data, architecture, and operating practices can support responsible AI adoption at scale.
For Organisations
A structured maturity assessment across core organisational AI capabilities.
Assess current state
Complete a structured maturity assessment across core organisational AI capabilities. Role-based questions ensure relevance – executives answer differently from engineers.
Receive maturity profile
Get a clear breakdown of strengths, weaknesses, and maturity level by capability area.
Prioritise next actions
Use targeted recommendations to focus on the changes that will unlock the most progress.
Organisational assessments are in early access. Get in touch to discuss your needs.
How It Works
A repeatable process to benchmark maturity and drive focused AI progress.
Assess current state
Complete a structured maturity assessment across core organisational AI capabilities.
Receive maturity profile
Get a clear breakdown of strengths, weaknesses, and maturity level by capability area.
Prioritise next actions
Use targeted recommendations to focus on the changes that will unlock the most progress.
Reassess and improve
Run the assessment periodically to measure progress and refine your AI transformation roadmap.