Choosing the red pill of AI reality means acknowledging a hard truth: technology is sprinting, but our workflows are stumbling. Right now, employees lose one full day per week to software friction. That is nearly eight hours vanished into the digital abyss. While artificial intelligence promises a massive productivity power-up, simply buying more tools will not fix workflow chaos.
This edition explores how to bridge the gap between rapid innovation and human readiness. We unpack the urgent need to build your "brain capital" to thrive alongside smart algorithms, examine the European struggle for digital sovereignty, and reveal why fixing integration issues is your best strategic move. Grab your coffee, and let's explore these expert insights.
The human advantage: Stronger brains in the age of AI
A recent report emphasizes the urgent need to invest in "brain capital"—a combination of brain health and brain skills—to thrive in the age of AI. As AI reshapes work, human intelligence remains irreplaceable, making brain capital essential for resilience, productivity, and growth. Underinvestment in brain health leads to significant societal and economic costs, while proactive measures can yield immense returns. The report outlines five levers for action: safeguarding brain health, fostering brain skills, advancing research, scaling investments, and mobilizing stakeholders. Prioritizing brain capital is not just a health imperative but a strategic economic necessity for a sustainable future.
Europe’s approach to emerging technologies has long been defined by caution. We saw it with cloud, and again with AI. That prudence brings clear benefits, especially as data risks become more visible. But it comes at a cost—talent, capital, and experimentation have concentrated in markets more willing to move fast and take risks.
Now, as “AI sovereignty” rises on the agenda, Europe is trying to reclaim ground it never fully built. The instinct is understandable, but the assumption that sovereignty means full control over the stack is flawed. In a globally interconnected ecosystem, that ambition risks slowing progress further.
A more credible path is selective strength: specialize where you can lead, partner where others are ahead. Focus on outcomes, not ownership.
Isolation is not the outcome we should be aiming for. Real sovereignty should come from the ability to apply AI to national priorities while shaping governance and standards, through collaboration, interoperability, and shared accountability.
88% of executives are confident that their workers have the right tools for the job, but only 21% of employees agree. A new WalkMe report claims employees lose 51 days per year to technology friction caused by bad tools, poor user experiences, and other system issues. That's the equivalent of 7.9 hours per week.
AI's biggest issues are a lack of skills and poor integration. Investment doesn't equal impact, and simply spending more money on more tools won't work. To close the gap, companies need to drive adoption before introducing more tools, embed AI into workflows to address existing technology friction, and provide clear guidance to workers.
Actress Milla Jovovich, known for her role in Resident Evil, co-developed MemPalace, an AI memory system inspired by the ancient “memory palace” technique used for centuries to organize and recall complex information. MemPalace aims for a perfect 100% score on the LongMemEval benchmark. This project demonstrates that advancements in AI are now more accessible, empowering individuals from diverse backgrounds to contribute to its innovation.
62% of European organizations are actively pursuing sovereign AI solutions, with investment accelerating as 60% plan to increase spending in the next two years. Adoption is led by highly regulated, data-sensitive sectors, including banking (76%), utilities (70%), and public services (69%). The trend is gaining momentum as organizations seek greater control over data, infrastructure, and risk in an increasingly complex geopolitical landscape.
Every enterprise AI decision carries weight. Are you tilting the odds in your favor? Discover why over 10,000 global enterprises trust us for intelligent automation. See what sets ABBYY apart in this new blog post.
Elevating Compliance and Security Through AI Risk Mitigation
Enterprise security spending is predicted to hit $244B this year (Gartner), highlighting the need for robust AI governance. Chief Compliance Officer Roman Kilun explains how to secure KYC compliance, operational efficiency, and regulatory adherence in this new article published in the latest issue of The Intelligent Enterprise.
Beating the 95% Fail Rate: Lessons with ABBYY MVP (Podcast)
Are stalled pilots holding you back? MIT reveals 95% of AI pilot projects fail. Tune in for insights on achieving scalable, value-driven enterprise workflows. ABBYY MVP Travis Spangler of Naviant, reveals how to achieve real AI ROI. Watch the full episode.
Financial services and insurance executives across the New York City metro area are invited to an exclusive, invite-only gathering focused on leaders shaping the future of compliance, risk, and operations. The session will explore how Document Intelligence and Process Intelligence can work together to create a resilient compliance framework for Know Your Customer (KYC) applications and deliver greater resilience and transparency, followed by a concise, peer-driven discussion. To round off the experience, attendees will have the opportunity to drive a supercar on a professional racetrack. Taking place on May 14 at the famous Old Bridge raceway park in NJ.
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