Bridging the Gap Between AI Hype and Adoption

Posted on September 03, 2025
Bridging the Gap Between AI Hype and Adoption

Artificial intelligence (AI) has captured the imagination of leaders across every sector. Boardrooms echo with discussions about how AI could transform operations, customer experiences, and strategic growth. While boardrooms are full of AI talk, Deloitte Canada research shows that only 26% of Canadian organizations have implemented AI, compared to 34% globally. This is a clear sign that Canada has been slow to translate AI discussions into real decisions and outcomes. Additionally, with only 12% of Canadian firms integrating AI into their processes, Canada sits near the bottom of the OECD in adoption. For many mid-career and senior leaders in Canada, a gap remains between curiosity and adoption. They recognize the potential but lack the practical fluency to see how AI fits into their own organizations.

Reading articles or attending conferences can spark awareness, but passive learning rarely builds confidence. Leaders don’t need to become coders or data scientists, but they do need enough working knowledge to confidently approve and oversee the impactful adoption of AI. That is the key to bridging the gap between those who lead the business and those further down the organization who understand and use AI for day-to-day tasks.

Moving Beyond the Hype

The reality is that AI is already embedded in tools employees and leaders use daily. Platforms like Microsoft Office, Copilot, and ChatGPT are bringing AI into everyday workflows, whether analyzing documents, automating repetitive tasks, or extracting insights from data.

The key for leaders is not just knowing that AI exists, but experiencing how it can solve challenges relevant to their world, such as:

  • Prioritizing customer service calls for faster response times
  • Optimizing sales pipelines and inventory to boost efficiency
  • Automating operational decisions on the shop floor

When leaders see these scenarios play out through guided simulations, the abstract becomes tangible.

Why a Lab Experience Matters

That’s where the concept of the AI Lab comes in. Much like a flight simulator prepares pilots for real-world challenges, Canada’s first AI & Data Leadership Lab by Schulich ExecEd creates a safe, structured environment for leaders to experiment. There’s no coding, no pressure, just practical exploration.

Participants learn to craft prompts, interpret outputs, and compare datasets, all while being guided through business scenarios that mirror their professional realities. The lab environment equips them with tools, challenges them to select a business-oriented use case, and supports them in achieving measurable results.

This kind of applied learning accelerates understanding. It helps leaders move from abstract enthusiasm to grounded confidence. The lab provides the missing step between awareness and action by equipping leaders with enough knowledge to create meaningful dialogue between AI specialists and business leaders, jumpstarting AI projects and ensuring that organizational strategy and AI capabilities stay aligned.

Leading the Change

Leading the charge toward AI adoption requires going a step further. There are other considerations leaders need to absorb about AI:

  • Data Governance and Structure: Using AI effectively to turn internal data into meaningful insights requires governance, structure, and well-architected data systems. Without sufficient and properly managed data, AI cannot perform its tasks. Leaders must ensure that IT and functional departments work together under a clear governance structure for company data.
  • AI and the Workforce: The role of AI in automating tasks needs to be clearly understood and defined. Any AI automation that replaces employees must be carefully evaluated. Many human roles require persuasiveness, initiative, and collaboration alongside AI, while in other cases automation can replace routine tasks. Leaders must collaborate with HR and functional heads to make these distinctions.
  • Generative AI and Research: Generative AI, when used for research and insights, must be adopted with care. The same prompts can yield very different results across
    AI engines, depending on their data sources and algorithms. Leaders should ensure employees using AI for research, proposals, or insights understand the importance of selecting the right tools and recognizing their limitations.

For those ready to take this step, Schulich ExecEd offers two opportunities: Applied Graduate Certificate in AI & Analytics for Leaders, a comprehensive 5-day program designed for non-technical professionals, and its 2-day standalone module, AI Lab for Leaders. Both are built to help today’s leaders turn awareness into action—and transform curiosity into capability. Contact our Education Advisor to learn more.

Written By

Michael De Luca

Michael De Luca is the Manager of Operations & Projects, overseeing open-enrolment programming at Schulich ExecEd. He leads the delivery of more than 40 programs designed to develop professionals at all career stages across diverse sectors and skillsets.

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