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From AI ambition to AI readiness: what government needs to focus on now

Across government, there is no shortage of ambition when it comes to artificial intelligence. Strategies are in place. Use cases are being explored. Pilots are running in pockets across departments and public services.

And yet, the same question keeps coming up:
why is it still so hard to move from experimentation to impact?

From our perspective at Zaizi, the answer is becoming increasingly clear. The challenge is not a lack of AI capability or opportunity. It’s a lack of organisational readiness to adopt AI safely, responsibly and at scale.

This isn’t about slowing innovation down. In fact, it’s the opposite. Readiness is what enables speed.

The real blockers aren’t technical

When organisations struggle to operationalise AI, the reasons are remarkably consistent:

None of these are solved by buying another tool or launching another pilot.

They are solved by getting the foundations right.

Why readiness matters more than pilots

Pilots are easy to start. Scaled services are hard to sustain.

AI becomes valuable when it is:

Without that readiness, organisations end up with isolated proofs of concept that never quite make the leap into everyday operations.

That’s when AI feels risky, expensive or disappointing — not because the technology doesn’t work, but because the organisation wasn’t prepared for it.

A practical way forward: focusing on readiness

At Zaizi, we work with public sector organisations operating in complex, high-assurance environments — where getting this wrong isn’t an option.

Through that work, we’ve identified seven practical steps that organisations need to address to become AI-ready. Not in theory, but in practice.

They focus on:

Taken together, these steps create the conditions where AI can move from experimentation into trusted, repeatable delivery.

Readiness is a leadership decision

Becoming AI-ready isn’t something that happens by accident, and it isn’t owned by one team.

It requires leadership teams to:

For government, this matters now. Not because AI is new, but because the opportunity cost of not acting — or acting without readiness — is growing.

Turning intent into impact

AI will only deliver value in public services when organisations are genuinely ready to adopt it.

That readiness is what turns ambition into action, pilots into services, and innovation into outcomes people can trust.

If you’d like to explore what AI readiness looks like in practice, you can read our AI Readiness Whitepaper, which sets out the 7 steps organisations need to address to adopt AI responsibly and at scale.

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