
""We want AI to penetrate all aspects of our business," he told ZDNET in a one-to-one conversation at a hotel in London, suggesting his company has created a top-down and bottom-up commitment, where employees are encouraged to explore AI in a tightly governed and secure manner. Also: 5 ways to prevent your AI strategy from going bust Key use cases include conversation summarization to assist support specialists, applying agentic AI to enterprise-grade software engineering, and using gen AI to create effective marketing collateral."
""That approach stretches all the way from 'I've heard of AI, and I'm thinking about it,' through to 'I'm playing with it in a sandbox,' to 'I've deployed it to my department,' to 'Hey, tens of thousands of people at the company use this tool," he said. This portfolio approach means the company has more than 1,000 registered projects across all business areas."
Lenovo adopts a portfolio-based AI approach that moves projects from exploration to sandbox testing, department deployment, and company-wide adoption. The company has more than 1,000 registered AI projects across business areas. Employees are encouraged to experiment under tight governance and security controls. Key use cases include conversation summarization for support, agentic AI for enterprise software engineering, and generative AI for marketing collateral. Security and AI leadership partnered to create an exploration policy that shifted from unfettered experimentation to careful guidance. The strategy emphasizes architecture, redundancy, measurable targets, and scaling promising projects to broader adoption.
Read at ZDNET
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