Ownership Beats Enthusiasm (Risk, Value, and Escalation)

Ownership Beats Enthusiasm

If you want the truth about AI in the mid‑market, it’s this: everybody is interested, but nobody wants to be blamed for a failed project, but they don’t want to be “that guy” who fell behind either.

That’s a rational reaction. AI touches customer communication, internal decision-making, and sensitive data. So, when ownership is vague, people either avoid using it- or use it quietly and hope nothing goes wrong.

The fix is surprisingly unsexy: assign ownership in a way that matches how work actually happens.

I like to separate ownership into two roles (they can be two people or one person wearing two hats):

  • Risk Owner (safety + control): Defines what’s in-bounds/out-of-bounds, approves tools, sets review triggers, and decides what happens after a mistake.
  • Value Owner (outcomes + scale): Owns the use cases, baseline metrics, adoption plan, and the decision to scale/stop based on measurable impact.

If you don’t name these roles, you get predictable failure patterns:

  • The ‘pilot that never ends’: Nobody has the authority to declare it successful, fund it, and roll it into a real workflow.
  • The ‘security veto at the 11th hour’: Risk concerns show up late because there was no early risk owner engaged.
  • The ‘shadow AI workaround’: People keep using consumer tools because the approved path is unclear or slow.
  • The ‘confidence crash’: One customer-facing mistake kills trust because there’s no escalation plan or learning loop.

The other piece that matters is escalation. You don’t need a hotline or a ticket queue. You need a simple rule like:

If it involves customers, regulated data, pricing/finance, HR, or security- pause and escalate.

Then make it easy: who do they escalate to, and how fast do they get an answer? Speed here is a governance feature. Slow answers create shadow behavior.

Next post, we’ll get concrete about ‘proof of control’- not audits and paperwork, but lightweight logging and review that lets you scale AI without guessing what happened later.

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