Accelerated Innovation

Our Solutions Readiness Accelerators Assess Your GenAI Center of Enablement Readiness
Accelerate Your GenAI Enablement Readiness

GenAI scale doesn’t happen on its own. This accelerator surfaces whether your CoE, learning pathways, support channels, and reusable guidance can help teams build and adopt what works.

Mind the Gap!

Many organizations jump into GenAI scale with more enthusiasm than plan. Without a strong CoE, teams duplicate effort, risks get baked into early solutions, and promising PoCs stall before the foundations for scale are in place.

Key GenAI CoE Questions
  • Are we clear on the CoE model needed to focus priorities, reduce duplication, and support GenAI scale?
  • Where are teams already duplicating effort, embedding risk, or pushing PoCs ahead without the foundations for scale?
  • What do we need to strengthen so our CoE helps teams move faster and scale GenAI with less risk?
The Bottom-Line
Without a strong CoE, GenAI scale fragments before it compounds.

Build the CoE Engine Coordinated GenAI Scale Requires

We assess whether your GenAI CoE is ready to focus priorities, reduce duplication, support teams, and scale what works. Then we build a practical plan to strengthen the gaps that matter most.

Launch Pad
Assess Your Readiness
Weeks 1–2
Align the team
  • Identify key stakeholders
  • Explore what “good” looks like
  • Explore Real-World Use Cases
Assess current state
  • Review Key Competencies
  • Assess Your Readiness
  • Add Comments for Context
Define readiness gaps
  • Define Group Readiness
  • Identify Mis-Alignment
  • Capture Group Themes
Mission Control & Lift-Off
Build Your
Plan
Weeks 3–4
Prioritize the gaps
  • Understand High-Impact Gaps
  • Explore Gap Closure Options
  • Prioritize For Impact & Effort
Build the roadmap
  • Define Key Steps
  • Align on Ownership
  • Define Target Timeline
Define success measures
  • Committed Target
  • Stretch Goals
  • Controls
Accelerate
Accelerate Your Momentum
Weeks 5–12
Execute priority moves
  • Execute your plan
  • Mitigate Risks
  • Validate Your Impact
Drive adoption & change
  • Identify Stakeholders
  • Communicate Changes
  • Action Feedback
Review impact & what's next
  • Re-baseline Readiness
  • Select Next Gaps
  • Update your readiness plan

Outcomes you can expect

Clarity

See which CoE gaps most limit focus, support, and scalable GenAI execution.

Alignment

Align around the mandate, services, and priorities your CoE should own.

Focus

Prioritize the gaps that most affect enterprise momentum, reuse, and coordinated execution.

Readiness

Build a stronger foundation for supporting GenAI scale across teams, functions, and use cases.

Impact

Improve the odds that GenAI efforts turn into compounding enterprise value.

A strong CoE turns GenAI momentum into coordinated execution the enterprise can scale.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Overview & Fit
2. Scope & Deliverables
3. Process & Timing
4. Participants & Ways of Working
5. Outcomes & Next Steps
  • Who is this GenAI Center of Enablement readiness accelerator for?
    Leaders establishing the GenAI enablement muscle that keeps scale coordinated.
  • When should we run a GenAI Center of Enablement readiness accelerator?
    When demand grows faster than standards, support, intake, or reusable guidance.
  • How is this different from a standard operating-model review?
    It tests enablement operating model, not simply whether a central team exists.
  • What exactly gets assessed in GenAI Center of Enablement readiness?
    CoE mandate, services, intake, standards, enablement routines, metrics, and operating gaps.
  • What inputs and artifacts should we bring into the accelerator?
    Bring intake workflows, service catalogs, playbooks, operating model materials, and enablement metrics.
  • What will we receive at the end of the accelerator?
    CoE readiness findings, priority gaps, and an enablement operating roadmap.
  • How long does the accelerator take?
    Plan on roughly 12 weeks, from diagnosis through prioritization and targeted gap closure.
  • How do the three phases work in practice?
    Diagnose gaps, align priorities, then close the most important blockers with focused support.
  • How hands-on is the 12-week period?
    Hands-on enough to convert findings into decisions, actions, and visible momentum.
  • Which teams should participate in the accelerator?
    Include CoE leaders, sponsors, product, risk, technology, data, and business leaders.
  • How much time should leaders and working teams expect to commit?
    Leaders join key decisions; working teams support diagnostics, workshops, and action planning.
  • How will the right teams work together during the accelerator?
    Teams align on intake, service tiers, playbooks, enablement ownership, and governance.
  • What changes when GenAI Center of Enablement readiness improves?
    GenAI teams get clearer standards, faster support, and more reusable enablement.
  • How quickly can we act on the findings?
    Immediately. Early findings can shape priorities while the full roadmap takes form.
  • What should we do after the readiness assessment is complete?
    Clarify the CoE model, service catalog, intake, and support routines.
Build the CoE Engine for Scale