Human-Centred AI Transformation

Move from AI experimentation to governed, practical adoption.

AI tools can accelerate work, but access alone does not create business value. Organizations need strong use cases, clear ownership, redesigned workflows, appropriate Human Control, measurable pilots, and people who understand how to work differently.

I help leaders and teams identify where AI can create meaningful value, establish the controls and accountability needed to use it responsibly, and prepare the organization to move from experimentation into sustained business use.

Opportunity selection · Human Control · Workflow design · Pilot readiness · Adoption

Transformation System

Useful. Governable. Operationally clear.

Opportunity readiness Human Control Workflow design Pilot and adoption

AI Changes More Than the Tool

The operating decisions are easy to overlook.

When AI is introduced into real work, organizations must make decisions about the work itself—not only the technology.

  • What problem is the organization actually trying to solve?
  • Which AI opportunities deserve investment?
  • What may AI recommend, draft, initiate, or execute?
  • What judgment and authority must remain human?
  • How should the workflow, roles, approvals, and handoffs change?
  • How will output quality, exceptions, incidents, and adoption be monitored?
  • Who remains accountable when AI contributes to the result?

The Human-Centred AI Transformation System

Five connected stages from opportunity assessment to sustainable adoption.

Each stage resolves a different class of decision. Skipping stages may create speed initially, but often creates rework, control gaps, weak adoption, or unclear operating ownership later.

1

Identify and prioritize the opportunity

Determine whether the use case is tied to a meaningful business outcome, is feasible enough to test, has suitable data or knowledge inputs, fits the workflow, and can be governed and adopted.

Use the AI Opportunity Readiness Scorecard →
2

Define Human Control

Determine what AI may do, what a person must review, supervise, decide, or own, and what validation, escalation, intervention, and evidence are required.

View the Human Oversight Toolkit →
3

Redesign the work

Map the current and future workflow, clarify changed responsibilities, define decision rights and controls, and identify the capabilities required to operate the new model.

Design the workflow with the Toolkit →
4

Prepare and evaluate the pilot

Define the pilot scope, accountable owner, permitted information, controls, evaluation plan, user preparation, monitoring, exit criteria, and handover conditions.

Available through consulting-supported work. A self-serve pilot toolkit is being prepared.
5

Govern adoption and scale

Assess whether the organization has the strategy, ownership, governance, operating model, Human Control, adoption capability, measurement, and support needed to sustain AI-assisted work.

View the AI Adoption and Human Control Review →

Core Areas of Support

Connect the business decision, the workflow, the controls, and the people.

AI opportunity and readiness

Separate promising use cases from ideas that need more preparation, redesign, simpler automation, or no further investment.

Human oversight and workflow design

Clarify AI authority, human responsibilities, review and supervision requirements, exception handling, operating controls, and changed roles.

Responsible pilot design

Create a pilot that can generate usable evidence about value, quality, risk, control effectiveness, adoption, and operational viability.

Adoption and operating-model readiness

Align leadership, governance, business ownership, user capability, measurement, support, and the transition into sustained operation.

Human Control

Human Control is not anti-automation.

Human Control does not mean a person must manually approve every AI output. It means people intentionally define the boundaries, controls, intervention conditions, and accountability around AI-supported work.

People intentionally define:

  • The business outcome
  • The permitted role and authority of AI
  • The limits and guardrails
  • The quality and validation standard
  • Monitoring and escalation conditions
  • Intervention and shutdown authority
  • Final accountability

Meaningful control depends on operating reality.

A highly automated workflow can remain under meaningful Human Control.

A workflow with a nominal human approver may not be meaningfully controlled if that person lacks the information, time, competence, or authority to challenge the output.

Read the Human Control Point of View →

Consulting Offers

Choose the level of review that matches the decision.

The offer ladder ranges from one defined workflow to a broader enterprise operating-model review.

Focused Review

Focused AI Workflow and Human Control Review

Typical duration: 7–10 business days

CAD $6,500 fixed

For one specific AI-supported workflow or decision that requires a clear operating design.

  • Up to three stakeholder interviews
  • Human Control assessment
  • One current-to-future workflow map
  • Role and accountability design
  • Required controls and implementation conditions
View the Review Options

Enterprise Review

Enterprise AI Adoption and Operating Model Review

Typical duration: 4–6 weeks

Starting at CAD $27,500

For larger or more complex organizations working across multiple functions, business units, or AI initiatives.

  • Broader stakeholder discovery
  • Portfolio-level use-case review
  • Multiple workflow deep dives
  • Cross-functional workshops
  • Operating-model findings
  • Enterprise roadmap and executive readout
View the Enterprise Option

Tools That Support the Method

Start independently, then add support when the work requires it.

Free Starting Point

AI Opportunity Readiness Scorecard

Pressure test one AI idea across value, feasibility, data and knowledge readiness, workflow fit, governance, Human Control, and adoption.

Use the Free Scorecard

Prioritization Kit

AI Opportunity Readiness Kit

Compare multiple AI opportunities, apply structured scoring and readiness gates, and prepare a practical shortlist.

View the Kit

Workflow Design Toolkit

Human Oversight and AI Workflow Design Toolkit

Define the Human Control Pattern, map the future workflow, clarify roles and controls, and identify the actions required before pilot or implementation.

View the Toolkit

Five Operating Principles

Keep the transformation grounded in real work.

These principles help prevent AI activity from becoming disconnected from business outcomes, workflow reality, accountability, and adoption.

Start with the business outcome, not the AI tool.

Define the problem, outcome, and decision before deciding where AI belongs.

Automate effort before automating accountability.

Reduce administrative and analytical effort without allowing responsibility to disappear.

Match Human Control to consequence and uncertainty.

The level of oversight should reflect what can go wrong and how difficult failure is to detect or reverse.

Design adoption into the workflow.

Users need clear roles, boundaries, controls, support, and measures inside the real work.

Measure business outcomes, not tool activity.

Usage shows activity. It does not prove quality, value, control effectiveness, or sustainable adoption.

Why This Work Fits My Background

The technology is new. Many of the operating questions are not.

My work has consistently sat between strategy, systems, governance, stakeholders, and delivery.

In enterprise transformation environments, I have worked through role design, security and access, approvals, documentation, testing readiness, training, stakeholder alignment, operational handover, and the structures required to keep complex work controlled.

I apply that transformation, governance, workflow, and adoption discipline to AI-supported work while working alongside appropriate technical, privacy, security, legal, and risk specialists where required.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about the practice.

Do you build or engineer AI systems?

My focus is the business, workflow, governance, Human Control, adoption, and execution side of AI transformation. Technical architecture, model engineering, security testing, privacy assessment, and legal interpretation should be completed by the appropriate specialists.

Is Human Control another name for manual approval?

No. Human Control may be designed through direct decision-making, pre-use review, ongoing supervision, sampling, monitoring, escalation, intervention, or bounded autonomous execution. The correct pattern depends on the work and its consequences.

Do we need to have selected an AI platform?

No. The work can begin with a business problem, proposed use case, workflow, or active pilot. Clarifying the operating need before selecting or scaling the tool is often valuable.

Is this only for regulated organizations?

No. The method is useful for any organization that needs clearer ownership, workflow fit, accountability, and adoption. Regulated, public-sector, and professional-services environments may require additional specialist review.

Where should we start?

Use the free scorecard when evaluating one idea. Use the toolkit when a use case has been selected and you need to design Human Control and the future workflow. Request a review when leadership needs independent interpretation across several use cases, stakeholders, or organizational gaps.

Human-Centred AI Transformation

Build AI-supported work that is useful, governable, and operationally clear.

Start with a tool or reach out about a focused workflow, organizational review, or enterprise engagement.