technology
PushButton AI Team ·

Everyone talks about "AI transformation" like you need to overhaul everything. But the companies actually winning? They're starting with one broken process. I get it. You've sat through webinars that turned into endless sales pitches. You've watched competitors announce "AI initiatives" while you're still trying to figure out what's real and what's hype. The last thing you need is another tech vendor telling you to rip out your current systems. Here's what changed my thinking: SkyCell didn't try to "AI transform" their entire pharma supply chain. They identified ONE expensive problem—temperature-controlled shipping failures—and pointed AI directly at it. Microsoft didn't sell them a vision. They solved a specific leak in the bucket. That's the pattern I keep seeing in businesses that actually get ROI from AI. They're not chasing innovation. They're finding their most expensive manual process and asking: "Could AI do this specific thing cheaper or faster?" Your first AI win isn't about transformation. It's about finding the one process where mistakes cost you the most money or time, then testing if AI can plug that specific hole. No rebuild required. Just one targeted fix. What's the one manual process in your business that costs you the most when it goes wrong? #AIStrategy #BusinessAI #SmallBusinessGrowth #PracticalAI
Everyone talks about "AI transformation" like you need to overhaul everything.
But the companies actually winning? They're starting with one broken process.
I get it. You've sat through webinars that turned into endless sales pitches. You've watched competitors announce "AI initiatives" while you're still trying to figure out what's real and what's hype. The last thing you need is another tech vendor telling you to rip out your current systems.
Here's what changed my thinking: SkyCell didn't try to "AI transform" their entire pharma supply chain. They identified ONE expensive problem—temperature-controlled shipping failures—and pointed AI directly at it. Microsoft didn't sell them a vision. They solved a specific leak in the bucket.
That's the pattern I keep seeing in businesses that actually get ROI from AI. They're not chasing innovation. They're finding their most expensive manual process and asking: "Could AI do this specific thing cheaper or faster?"
Your first AI win isn't about transformation. It's about finding the one process where mistakes cost you the most money or time, then testing if AI can plug that specific hole.
No rebuild required. Just one targeted fix.
What's the one manual process in your business that costs you the most when it goes wrong?
#AIStrategy #BusinessAI #SmallBusinessGrowth #PracticalAI
In April 2025, SkyCell announced that it would be collaborating with Microsoft to integrate SkyMind, SkyCell's AI-powered supply chain solution, with ...