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Crucial Lack of Expertise Behind Failure of 95% of Enterprise AI Projects

Stuat Dorman presents at Sabio Disrupt in 2024

Stuat Dorman presents at Sabio Disrupt in 2024

Stu Dorman addresses delegates at the UK National Contact Centre Conference '25

Stu Dorman addresses delegates at the UK National Contact Centre Conference '25

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Stu Dorman at CCMA's UK Contact Centre Conference

Stu Dorman at CCMA's UK Contact Centre Conference

Whilst 95% of enterprise AI initiatives fail to reach production, the underlying cause isn't technological limitations — it's the critical shortage of expertise

Big tech wants you to believe AI deployment is simple — just plug in and transform your operation. The reality is starkly different.”
— Stuart Dorman, Chief Innovation Officer, Sabio Group
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM, October 3, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ -- - Technology limitations not to blame for widespread AI implementation failures

- Voice expected to emerge as fastest-growing AI-powered customer service channel



A stark reality check awaits contact centre leaders pursuing AI transformation: whilst 95% of enterprise AI initiatives fail to reach production, the underlying cause isn't technological limitations — it's the critical shortage of expertise needed to execute successfully.

Stuart Dorman, Chief Innovation Officer at Sabio Group, delivered this sobering message to delegates at the UK National Contact Centre Conference earlier this week, challenging the industry's approach to AI adoption whilst revealing why voice interaction could become the dominant customer service channel within three years.

“Big tech wants you to believe AI deployment is simple — just plug in and transform your operation,” said Stuart. “The reality is starkly different. Anyone can build a demo bot in an afternoon, but scaling AI to handle thousands of voice interactions at high performance levels requires expertise that many organisations simply don't possess.”

Stuart’s session at the conference exposed the uncomfortable truth behind why so many AI implementations fail. Successful deployment demands a rare combination of skills: user experience design, linguistics expertise, AI prompt engineering, data science capabilities, systems integration knowledge, and deep understanding of contact centre operations.

Stuart explained. “The cost of AI technology is plummeting — ChatGPT tokens have reduced 1,000-fold in just three years for example — but expertise to exploit this technology are difficult to find as demand outstrips supply. It’s particularly becoming harder in the contact centre, where organisations are finding it harder to find the skilled resources required to bring AI to life within a CX transformation.”

This creates a paradox: whilst underlying AI model costs decrease 10-fold annually, the specialist knowledge required for implementation becomes increasingly expensive and scarce.

Stuart added: “Most AI deployments are internally facing ‘knowledge agents’ and these are great as a starting point, but they are only scratching the surface of what AI can do. There are lots and lots of exciting potential use cases where AI has an external focus and this is where the true potential for AI technology lies. That’s something that we’re actively discussing with our customers at the minute.”

Voice: The biggest opportunity for productivity gains

Contradicting predictions of text-based dominance, Stuart argued that voice will become the fastest-growing customer service channel over the next three years, driven by a fundamental human preference. “That’s providing organisations stop trying to prevent customers from speaking to them by hiding phone numbers and forcing the use of poorly implemented chatbots,” said Stuart.

“We speak at 150 words per minute but type at only 40,” he told delegates. “As AI eliminates traditional channel boundaries, customers will naturally gravitate towards voice interaction. The future isn't about replacing phone support — instead it's about making every digital touchpoint conversational.”

The conference tackled a provocative proposition: can AI actually deliver superior customer experiences compared to human agents for specific interaction types? Early implementations suggest this isn't just possible but inevitable.

“What happens to your operation when you can deliver better experiences at 10 times lower cost?" Stuart asked delegates. “This isn't about doing more with less — it's about unlocking entirely new service possibilities.”

The Implementation Reality Check

For the estimated 30% of Fortune 500 companies planning single AI-enabled channels by 2028, the message is clear: success depends more on implementation expertise than technology selection.

“The organisations thriving in AI transformation aren't necessarily those with the biggest budgets,” concluded Stuart. “They're the ones who recognise that expert guidance through the complexity of real-world deployment is non-negotiable.”

The UK National Contact Centre Conference was held on 30th September at the QE11 Centre, Westminster. The conference brings together industry leaders to address modern contact centre challenges and trends, including practical AI implementation opportunities.

ends

Stuart Dorman was speaking about ‘CX & AI: What's Possible?' at the UK National Contact Centre Conference. Sabio Group provides expert AI services and implementation support for organisations transforming customer experience. Visit www.sabiogroup.com for more info.

Joe O'Brien NEW
Sabio Group
+44 7825 170269
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