I’ve spent the last 18 months working with enterprise clients trying to “adopt AI.”
After 50 conversations with CIOs, here’s the shocking truth:
47 out of 50 AI initiatives failed before launch.
Most never made it past PowerPoint.
💀 The Enterprise Pattern
Every failed AI project looks exactly like this:
Month 1: Announce "AI initiative"
Month 3: Hire consultants
Month 6: Approve $2M budget
Month 12: Build a demo that works for 5 users
Month 18: Scale fails, blame "technical challenges"
Month 24: Sunset quietly, start over with new buzzword
💡 The Actual Problem (Not What You Think)
Everyone blames “the models.”
The real blockers?
1980s infrastructure
Data that doesn’t talk to itself
Security rules that block everything
Vendors wrapping old tools with “AI” branding
It’s not lack of tech — it’s lack of honesty.
🧩 The 3 Companies That Actually Made AI Work
Insurance company (47 employees): Automated claims routing. $47K → 340% ROI.
Manufacturer: Built internal AI sandbox. 8 teams, $120K → $2.1M saved.
Healthcare org: Fixed data infrastructure first. 2.5 years later → working AI pilots.
They started small. No announcements. No hype. Just shipped.
⚙️ What This Taught Me
Big companies announce AI.
Small teams ship AI.
Infrastructure beats inspiration.
Real AI is boring — and that’s why it works.
🚀 For Indie Hackers
If you’re building AI tools for businesses —
don’t sell “AI transformation.”
Sell something that actually works in <90 days.
You’ll win the contracts the big players can’t deliver.
TL;DR:
Enterprises are spending millions on “AI strategy.”
Indie hackers are the ones actually building working AI.
💬 What’s the smallest AI win you’ve seen actually ship?
Would love to hear your stories.
Unfortunately I have seen more companies selling "IA" but it is not really "IA" . You bring a very good point, there are now smaller players who are winning the contracts because the big players aren't ready.
This hits hard. Couldn’t agree more — we’ve seen the same “AI theater” happen even at mid-size firms.
At Cognimuse, we started focusing only on <30-day AI builds for founders — small, useful, and testable.
Real ROI seems to come when AI quietly fits into existing workflows instead of trying to “transform” them.