Artificial intelligence is everywhere right now.
Every software vendor seems to be adding AI-powered assistants, automated summaries, predictive insights, and workflow recommendations. Whether you're using Jira, Asana, Monday.com, Halo ITSM, or another platform, AI features are becoming increasingly common.
While these capabilities can be incredibly useful, there's a misconception that AI can somehow solve underlying operational problems on its own.
The reality is that AI can accelerate good processes, but it cannot fix broken ones.
If your organisation is struggling with unclear ownership, inconsistent workflows, poor reporting, or fragmented systems, AI may simply help you move faster in the wrong direction.
Most AI tools rely on the information already available within your systems.
If project updates are incomplete, tasks are inconsistently managed, or teams use different processes for similar work, AI has very little reliable information to work with.
This is often referred to as the "garbage in, garbage out" problem.
For example:
Before organisations can benefit from AI-powered insights, they need a clear and structured approach to managing work.
Many organisations already have capable technology.
What they often lack is agreement on how work should flow through the business.
Questions such as these frequently reveal the real challenges:
Without clear answers, introducing AI simply adds another layer of complexity.
Successful digital transformation is rarely about buying new software. More often, it's about creating repeatable processes that help teams work consistently and effectively.
One of the biggest benefits of modern work management platforms is visibility.
When work is managed in a structured way, organisations gain access to meaningful reporting and operational insights.
Leaders can answer important questions such as:
These insights are valuable regardless of whether AI is involved.
In fact, AI becomes significantly more useful when it can analyse high-quality data from well-managed workflows.
For organisations looking to improve reporting and decision-making, establishing a reliable work management framework should often be the first step.
You can learn more about improving management reporting in our guide to Jira reporting and dashboards:
→ BDQ Blog | Supercharge Your Management Reporting from Jira
A useful way to think about AI is that it acts as an amplifier.
If your processes are effective, AI can help teams become even more productive.
Examples include:
However, if processes are unclear or inconsistent, AI can amplify confusion just as effectively.
The organisations seeing the greatest benefits from AI are typically those that already have mature approaches to project management, service management, and collaboration.
Regardless of the platform you use, successful work management typically includes:
These principles apply whether you're managing projects in Asana, delivering services through Jira Service Management, coordinating teams in Monday.com, or supporting business operations with Halo ITSM.
Technology enables these outcomes, but process design makes them sustainable.
As AI capabilities continue to evolve, organisations should absolutely explore how they can benefit from automation and intelligent assistance.
However, the most successful organisations are not asking:
"How do we add AI?"
Instead, they are asking:
"How do we improve the way we work?"
Once processes are clear, data is reliable, and teams are aligned, AI becomes far more effective.
AI is an exciting development, but it is not a shortcut to operational excellence.
If your organisation is struggling with visibility, reporting, collaboration, or inconsistent processes, focusing on work management fundamentals may deliver greater value than any AI feature alone.
If anything in this article sounds familiar, get in touch with the BDQ team. We help organisations improve work management, service management, reporting, and collaboration across platforms including Atlassian, Asana, Monday.com, HaloITSM, and Zephyr. We'd be happy to discuss your goals and help you identify practical next steps.