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AI as Strategy

Your AI Roadmap Isn’t a Strategy. It’s a Backlog With Branding

Rob Angeles4 min readPublished
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Your AI Roadmap Isn’t a Strategy. It’s a Backlog With Branding

AI adoption plans are being sold as strategic vision. In reality, most are just delivery lists dressed up in slides.

Your AI roadmap isn’t a strategy. It’s a to-do list with lipstick.

The illusion of vision

Executives love a roadmap. Rows of milestones, arrows pointing forward, boxes with neat labels like “Q2: Deploy chatbot” or “Q3: Predictive maintenance.” It feels like momentum. It looks good in the board pack. But most AI roadmaps are not strategy. They are lists of what the company happens to have the capability to deliver, arranged in an order that fits the delivery calendar rather than the competitive fight.

That path leads you to being average. You buy the same tools as your rivals, in roughly the same order, and your only point of difference is the colour of your slides.

When capabilities set the agenda

It starts with capability-led thinking. A vendor runs a demo of a shiny new AI feature. An internal team says, “We can build that.” Into the roadmap it goes. Not because it shifts your position in the market, but because it is possible, fundable, and available now.

Months later, the roadmap looks like a scrapbook of delivered features. There is no story. No clear line from the first move to the endgame. Just a record of what got built.

The cost of following the crowd

If your roadmap is a mirror of your competitors’ capabilities, you are not competing on position. You are competing on price, on speed, or on the polish of your customer service. None of these will hold for long in a market where everyone has access to the same vendors.

The day your rival switches on the same feature, your “strategic win” becomes table stakes. That is not strategy. That is keeping up.

Example: the chatbot graveyard

Retail has been littered with AI chatbot projects over the past five years. They appeared on roadmaps under headings like “Improve customer service with AI,” then were pushed live. Most could answer a handful of questions, redirect you to a page, and capture an email address.

They hit the delivery milestone. They made the KPI look good. They had zero impact on the competitive landscape. In many cases, they trained customers to lower their expectations. Now, a “virtual assistant” greeting is more likely to trigger an eye-roll than a sale.

This is roadmap-as-strategy in action. You delivered, but you never advanced.

Building intent into the plan

A real AI strategy starts with the outcome you want to force in the market, then works backwards to the tools. That requires:

  • Defining the shift you want to create before picking the technology.

  • Sequencing work for maximum strategic leverage instead of delivery convenience.

  • Measuring by competitive position rather than feature completion.

If you want to be the fastest insurer to pay claims, your roadmap should be built around that single goal. The AI tools you pick and the order you deploy them in are chosen because they push you toward that position, not because they happened to be on the shelf.

The resolution: stop branding your backlog

When you blur the line between backlog and strategy, you get the illusion of progress. Slides look good. Milestones fall like dominos. The market impact is close to zero.

The players who will own the next decade are not painting prettier timelines. They are moving like chess masters, willing to trade short-term applause for positions their competitors cannot escape.

If your AI roadmap reads like a shopping list of builds, you are not shaping the market. You are letting it shape you.

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Rob Angeles

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Rob Angeles

Most consulting engagements split the thinking from the doing. Rob doesn't. Principal Consultant at Archos Labs, he owns the full stack — assessment, architecture, delivery — across retail, financial services, healthcare, and government.