Most organizations treat buy-versus-build as a technology decision. It isn’t. It’s a readiness decision.

Most organizations treat buy-versus-build as a technology decision. It isn’t. It’s a readiness decision.

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Making that decision before understanding your own organizational state is how you end up with a platform no one uses, a custom build that solves the wrong problem, or both.

What I’ve found working with nonprofits and small businesses is that the gaps rarely begin with the tools.

They show up in strategy alignment, data quality, ownership clarity, workforce readiness, and governance.

Those aren’t implementation problems. They’re pre-implementation problems. And no vendor solves them for you.

That’s why AI engagements at FIG begin with AI Phase Zero.

Phase Zero starts with a Guided AI Assessment and examines the five dimensions that determine whether an AI initiative can succeed: Strategy, Data, People, Technology, and Governance.

The most important outcome isn’t a readiness score.

It’s answering the question many leaders ask too late

Should we buy a solution, build one, or build something deliberately simple? Getting that answer before the budget conversation can save organizations significant time, money, and organizational trust.

If you’re at the beginning of that conversation, that’s where I suggest starting.

Think Big. Start Small. Iterate Often.

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Category: Blog – LinkedIn Updates
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