technology
PushButton AI Team ·

Everyone's rushing to "AI-enable" their websites. But a Belfast digital firm just analyzed 1,000 businesses and found something surprising: the ones migrating to AI website builders too quickly are the ones struggling most. I get it. You've sat through webinars that turned into course pitches. You're watching competitors announce "AI transformation" and wondering if you're already behind. The pressure to do something with AI is real. Here's what the ProfileTree research actually revealed: established businesses with existing websites that work are facing significant problems when they migrate to AI-powered builders. Not because AI is bad, but because they're replacing functioning systems before understanding what problem they're solving. The businesses succeeding? They're asking a different question. Not "How do I add AI to my website?" but "What specific problem am I trying to fix?" Slow load times? Poor mobile experience? Conversion tracking? The gap isn't technical readiness. It's problem clarity. Before touching your website, document three specific issues costing you money right now. Match those problems to solutions, AI or otherwise. That's your roadmap. Your existing system might need optimization, not replacement. What's one website problem you've been told "AI will fix" that you're still unsure about? #AIImplementation #SmallBusinessAI #DigitalTransformation #BusinessStrategy
Everyone's rushing to "AI-enable" their websites. But a Belfast digital firm just analyzed 1,000 businesses and found something surprising: the ones migrating to AI website builders too quickly are the ones struggling most.
I get it. You've sat through webinars that turned into course pitches. You're watching competitors announce "AI transformation" and wondering if you're already behind. The pressure to do something with AI is real.
Here's what the ProfileTree research actually revealed: established businesses with existing websites that work are facing significant problems when they migrate to AI-powered builders. Not because AI is bad, but because they're replacing functioning systems before understanding what problem they're solving.
The businesses succeeding? They're asking a different question. Not "How do I add AI to my website?" but "What specific problem am I trying to fix?" Slow load times? Poor mobile experience? Conversion tracking?
The gap isn't technical readiness. It's problem clarity.
Before touching your website, document three specific issues costing you money right now. Match those problems to solutions, AI or otherwise. That's your roadmap.
Your existing system might need optimization, not replacement.
What's one website problem you've been told "AI will fix" that you're still unsure about?
#AIImplementation #SmallBusinessAI #DigitalTransformation #BusinessStrategy
ProfileTree analysis of 1,000 business AI training programmes reveals significant readiness gaps among small and medium enterprises across Ireland and ...