They have seen a decade of digital transformation promises that evaporated the moment they hit the P&L.
When you present slides filled with projected efficiency gains, optimized workflows, and extra capacity, the board and executives sees guesswork wrapped in a spreadsheet.
In my experience advising C-suites across forestry, banking, and energy, trust is not built on benchmarks.
Benchmarks are generic.
Executives and Board members care about their specific operational reality, not an industry average.
To optimize executive trust, you must pivot your design:
First, stop selling efficiency. Efficiency is a theoretical gain.
Instead, tie ROI to hard outcomes like reduced OpEx or accelerated revenue capture.
Second, replace static projections with value gates.
Do not ask for the full budget based on a model.
Ask for funding in stages, where each phase must prove a tangible metric before the next tranche of capital is released.
Third, shift from "what we might save" to "what we are risking by waiting."
Fear of obsolescence often outweighs the desire for optimization.
If you want the executive team and board to believe your numbers, stop trying to be precise and start being provable.
Move away from the calculator and toward a validation roadmap.
Do you trust your current AI projections, or are you just guessing with better formatting?
#GenerativeAI #ExecutiveLeadership #DigitalTransformation #CorporateGovernance #CanadaBusiness #AIGovernance