Browsing All posts tagged under »ChatGPT«

Dissecting o9 Solutions’ Recent Case Studies: What They’re Not Telling You About Organizational Readiness

November 19, 2025

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Why your AI success begins before you select an AI technology.

This is why prompts are an insult to AI

November 18, 2025

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If you treat AI as a vending machine, all you will ever get is empty calorie candy.

There Is No Fate But What We Make For Ourselves: Job Displacement In The AI Era

November 12, 2025

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100+ years of innovation created more jobs than it destroyed. Until now. What changed?

Should AI Do Your Laundry (And Your Job)?

November 12, 2025

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Do you want AI to do your job? If not, what are you doing about it?

The Pattern That Repeats Every Decade: Why Technology Keeps Failing at 70-80% Rates

November 10, 2025

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Why are organizations repeating the same mistakes with AI that caused 75-85% of e-procurement initiatives to fail 20 years ago?

Six AI Models Converge: The Agentic AI Governance Crisis Validates 27 Years of Readiness-First Research

November 10, 2025

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When six independent AI models analyze the same governance crisis and five reach identical conclusions, what does that tell us?

Is Gartner Inadvertently Stacking the Odds Against Your AI Success?

November 8, 2025

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Is the AI deck "stacked" against you?

In 2008, I Predicted Agentic AI and the Need for an Operating System to Break ProcureTech’s Failure Cycle. Here’s Why 90% Will Still Fail by 2026

November 8, 2025

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In 2008, I asked if your enterprise had a 'Digital Nervous System.' The answer was no. In 2025, with AI agents, it's still no. That's why 90% will fail by 2026.

Six Independent AI Models Analyzed The October Diaries. Here’s What They Found.

November 5, 2025

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What six AI models discovered when they analyzed 30 days of documented conversational AI practice—and why it matters for procurement professionals.

From Prediction to Practice: When Multiple Disciplines Discover the Same Pattern

October 30, 2025

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What is Data Singularity and why does it enable us to move beyond the limitations of sequential thinking in Procurement and business?