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1. Strategic Reinvention

1. What is this track?

Strategic Reinvention is the most fundamental of the three tracks. Organisations choosing this track recalibrate their strategy, business model and competitive position from an AI-first perspective. It is not about adding AI to existing processes, but the question: "If AI had always existed, would we do this work in the same way?"

This track is suitable for organisations in the Visionary profile that are ready for systemic change.


2. Characteristics of this Track

  • Scope: Entire organisation or strategic business unit.
  • Time horizon: 18–36 months.
  • Risk profile: High — requires leadership, mandate and adaptability.
  • Typical driver: Competitive displacement, new market entrants or a strategic board decision.

3. Core Activities

Step 1 — Strategic Recalibration

Analyse the current strategic position and define an AI-driven future vision:

  1. Value chain analysis: Which links in the value chain are affected by AI?
  2. Competitive intelligence: How quickly are competitors adopting AI capabilities?
  3. Scenario planning: Sketch three scenarios for the market in five years, each with a different AI maturity level.
  4. Strategic choice: Deliberately choose a position (leader, follower, niche player).

Step 2 — Organisational Design

A new strategy requires an adapted organisational design:

  • Role definition: Which functions disappear, transform or emerge?
  • Competency model: Which AI skills are critical for each role?
  • Governance: Expand the Guardian role to an AI Board with company-wide mandate.

Step 3 — Phased Execution

Execute the reinvention in phases, so that the organisation can learn and adjust:

Phase Duration Focus
Initiation Month 1–3 Vision, strategy, mandate, Quick Wins
Pilot phase Month 4–12 3–5 strategic use cases in production
Scale rollout Month 13–24 Breadth: all relevant domains
Institutionalisation Month 25–36 AI is 'business as usual'

4. Success Factors

  • Board commitment: Without active leadership from the board or management team, this track fails.
  • Fail fast, learn fast: Expect that some strategic bets will not pay off — build this into the planning.
  • Communication: Be transparent about what is changing and what this means for people.
  • External benchmark: Use external parties to identify strategic blind spots.

5. Risks

Risk Measure
Resistance from middle management Involve middle management early as co-designers
Technology overestimation Set realistic milestones; pilot before scale
Data quality underestimated Perform Data Evaluation before strategic commitments
Loss of human capital Invest in retraining alongside automation