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J. Michael Dennis ll.l., ll.m. Live

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Tag Archives: Business

The Future of AI: A Consultant’s Perspective

11 Wednesday Feb 2026

Posted by JMD Live Online Business Consulting in General

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ai, Artificial Intelligence, Business, chatgpt, Technology

A Consultant’s Perspective on What Actually Matters

As an AI Consultant, I spend far less time discussing models, benchmarks, or product launches than most people expect. Those details matter, but they are not where the real transformation is happening.

The future of Artificial Intelligence will not be decided by algorithms alone. It will be decided by how organizations, leaders, and institutions choose to integrate intelligence into their decision-making, operations, and culture.

From the field, the signal is clear: AI is moving from a tool you “use” to a system you work with.

1. AI Is Becoming Strategic Infrastructure, Not Software

Most organizations still approach AI as a technology purchase. That mindset is already obsolete. AI is rapidly becoming cognitive infrastructure, a layer that influences: How decisions are made; How work is coordinated; How knowledge flows across the organization; How risks are identified and mitigated.

In the near future, competitive advantage will not come from having access to AI (everyone will), but from how intelligently it is embedded into business processes and governance structures.

This is not an IT problem. It is a leadership problem.

2. The Real Shift: From Automation to Augmentation

The dominant narrative focuses on job displacement. In practice, what I observe is something subtler and more disruptive: the redefinition of expertise.

AI excels at: Pattern recognition; Synthesis at scale; Speed and consistency. Humans remain essential for: Judgment under uncertainty; Contextual and ethical reasoning; Strategic prioritization; Accountability.

The future belongs to professionals who can collaborate with AI systems, supervise them, and translate their outputs into real-world decisions. Organizations that fail to reskill their people around this reality will fall behind, regardless of how advanced their tools appear.

3. Why Most AI Initiatives Fail

From a consulting standpoint, AI failures rarely stem from weak models. They stem from: Poor problem definition; Misaligned incentives; Lack of data governance; Absence of ownership and accountability; Unrealistic expectations driven by hype.

Successful AI adoption requires discipline: Clear use cases tied to measurable outcomes; Human-in-the-loop design; Change management, not just deployment; Continuous evaluation and iteration.

AI is not a one-time implementation. It is an ongoing organizational capability.

4. Trust, Governance, and the Consultant’s Blind Spot

As AI systems gain autonomy, trust becomes the limiting factor.

Leaders increasingly ask: “Can we explain this decision?”; “Who is accountable if this goes wrong?”; “Are we exposing ourselves to legal or reputational risk?”

The future of AI will be constrained, and/or enabled, by governance. Consultants and leaders who ignore this dimension are setting their organizations up for long-term failure.

Responsible AI is not a moral luxury; it is a strategic necessity.

5. The Rise of Personal and Organizational AI Agents

We are entering a phase where AI will be persistent, personalized, and proactive.

In practical terms: Executives will work with AI advisors; Teams will share AI copilots; Organizations will develop collective intelligence systems.

The consultant’s role will evolve accordingly: from recommending tools to architecting intelligence ecosystems aligned with strategy, culture, and values.

6. What Leaders Should Be Doing Now

From my perspective, the organizations that will thrive are already: Treating AI as a board-level topic; Investing in AI literacy across leadership; Designing governance before scaling deployment; Experimenting in controlled, high-impact areas; Focusing on augmentation, not replacement.

Waiting for “mature” AI is a strategic error. Maturity comes from engagement.

Conclusion: AI Will Reward Clarity, Not Hype

The future of AI will not favor the loudest adopters or the most aggressive automators. It will favor those who approach AI with clarity of purpose, discipline of execution, and respect for human judgment.

As an AI Consultant, my role is not to sell technology, it is to help organizations think clearly about intelligence: how it is created, governed, and applied. Those who do this well will not just survive the AI transition. They will shape it.

J. Michael Dennis ll.l., ll.m.

Based in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, J. Michael Dennis is a former barrister and solicitor, a Crisis & Reputation Management Expert, a Public Affairs & Corporate Communications Specialist, a Warrior for Common Sense and Free Speech. Today, J. Michael Dennis help executives and professionals understand, evaluate, and responsibly deploy AI without hype, technical overload, or strategic blindness.

Contact

jmdlive@jmichaeldennis.live

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THE FUTURE OF WORK IN 2024

15 Monday Jan 2024

Posted by JMD Live Online Business Consulting in The future of work

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Business, Home work, Hybrid Work, management, remote-work, Technology, The future of work, work-life-balance

As we advance in 2024, the remote work debate remains as polarized as ever. There is still an unmistakable demand for remote work and greater flexibility. According to the latest surveys, many employees would be willing to forgo up to $6,000 in annual salary for the privilege of working from home. However, companies have a different outlook and polarizing opinions on the future of work-from-home. Many business CEOs are articulating that even the most advanced virtual environments cannot the “engaging, collaborative, and productive” dynamics of a physical workspace cannot be replicated; an opinion that we share.

In 2024, remote work has become a battleground of contrasting philosophies and priorities. From employees willing to relinquish thousands in annual salaries for the privilege of remote work to CEOs entrenched in traditionalist views of office-centric productivity, the fault lines are clear. The debate is more than a mere tug-of-war between freedom and collaboration; it is an existential question about the future of work itself. While some businesses exemplify how remote work can not only empower employees but also deliver unprecedented business value. Other businesses and organizations clinging to a total return to the office may find themselves grappling with not just logistical hurdles but also a potential exodus of talent.

So, what is the verdict for 2024? 

The future of work from home appears to be a nuanced “lifestyle for value” paradigm where flexibility, sustainability, and well-being are the new currencies. Hybrid work models will likely dominate, driven by a results-oriented culture that redefines performance metrics.

As organizations juggle between the compelling advantages of remote work and the intangible benefits of in-office collaboration, one thing is sure: the future of work will be a crucible for broader societal transformation, compelling us to redefine not just how we work but why.

Michel Ouellette JMD, ll.l., ll.m.

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J. Michael Dennis, ll.l., ll.m.

Business &Corporate Strategist

Systemic Strategic Planning

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Facebook no more!

20 Thursday Jun 2013

Posted by JMD Live Online Business Consulting in Général / General

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Business, Facebook, Linkedin, Mossad, Online Communities, Social media, Social network, Twitter

Goodbye-facebook

It’s official.  I am no longer a fan of Facebook.

While nobody offended me, while I did not have a bad experience, I am not thrilled about the useless informal idea of social media sharing.

Facebook have been sucking time from my life too long and not making me any money and, unlike money, time is a zero sum game. While some of the time spend on Facebook may have edifying, as a real person, I rather much prefer to meet with my real friends Face to Face and most of my Facebook friends are not actually friends.  This makes me wonder of the reason why I initially got on Facebook: “How many virtual friends can I assemble?” 

As for the photo sharing process, there are other much more better options.  And, after all, everything considered, why would I care about sharing and seeing my pictures on Facebook for the FBI, the Mossad, The CIA, The RCMP or other mobster organization or governmental agencies around the world? Do I hate myself, the members of my family or my friends that much? Thinking about it, Facebook often brings out the worst in people.  The willingness of so many to demonstrate their arrogance and total ignorance of the facts of life still boggles me!  I learn more about everything and everyone on Twitter.  

Twitter is in fact to Facebook what a biography is to a novel. There is nothing wrong with reading fiction, but I confess that I feel a little guilty and ashamed when I spend time reading something that do not make any sense, that is total fabrication, that did not or will never actually happen. Twitter is now one of my number one sources for hard news, opinions and facts as well as a relational connecting point. This is even better than LinkedIn to learn about people and or their expertise. Twitter is more of a resource and less of a popularity contest and self-congratulating tool than both, Facebook and LinkedIn

Furthermore, the presence of ads on Facebook is getting ridiculous.  Am I the only one who notices that?

Yes, like I like to say, “less is often more” and my only mission in life is to simplify life, my life and the life of everyone else who, like me, would like to profit from life, not just have a taste of what life can be. What I want, for myself and everyone is a lower cost of living, both financial and energy wise and a higher quality of life. What I want is to limit the number of these insignificant and meaningless things that compete for my attention so that I can enjoy those I really care the most about.  Yes indeed, less is often more and Facebook is simply not for me.

Goodbye, Facebook, Hello Twitter!

JMD

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Networking as a Branding Tool

18 Thursday Apr 2013

Posted by JMD Live Online Business Consulting in Général / General

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Brand, Branding, Business, Professional, Social media

Networking

Make it fun and enjoyable for everyone

It is always true that alone or without a customer, you are not going anywhere. It is, and it will always be others, who will eventually decide whether to buy or not your product, your service, whether to hire you or not, give you that promotion, or invest in your project. This is the one and only reason why you shall always look forward to further consolidate and develop of your brand by fostering your existing contacts and acquiring new ones. The quantity and quality of your contacts is and always will be the best yardstick with which to measure the success of your personal and professional branding and this is what networking is all about.

Networking and branding is all about helping other people.

Whatever the nature of the social or professional event you may be considering attending, always think networking. Think about how can you be of any help to others first and how you can forge a relationship that will be ultimately beneficial for both parties. When meeting with people, new or old acquaintances always think about how you can help these people. Speaking about their personal or professional life, listening to them instead of speaking about you is always a good start and very good branding.

Good branding and networking is all and everything about attending the right events, speaking to the right people in the right time and in the right way.When conducted properly, networking is usually fun, productive and the greatest personal and professional branding tool that you may have.

Just remember to make it fun and enjoyable.

JMD

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