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How UK businesses can effectively overcome the AI implementation gap

by June 16, 2025
June 16, 2025
How UK businesses can effectively overcome the AI implementation gap

The UK has long been a leader in artificial intelligence (AI) research, pioneering breakthroughs in areas like healthcare, financial modelling and cybersecurity. The Government’s AI Action Plan and recent investments highlight a clear ambition to establish the UK as a global AI superpower. However, ambition alone is not enough.

The UK is ranked among the top five nations in the world for AI readiness, yet businesses continue to struggle with implementation. A recent survey found that just a quarter of UK enterprises have adopted AI technology since the pandemic. Without effective adoption across multiple industries, the UK risks gaining a reputation synonymous with AI ambition rather than successful execution.

Michael Green, UK&I MD and Country leader, Databricks, explain at to convert theoretical innovation into tangible use cases, businesses must address three critical areas: workforce upskilling, data democratisation, and specialist AI talent acquisition.

Democratising data to drive AI success

Effective AI adoption is impossible without strong data foundations. Yet, many UK businesses still struggle with data quality issues. Research indicates that  9 in 10 (91%) of UK business leaders admit it negatively impacts their operations, limiting AI’s ability to drive meaningful insights.

Investing in platforms that centralise and democratise data access can help eliminate the blocker that poor-quality data can have on AI success. With intelligent data platforms built on a lakehouse architecture, which provides an open, unified foundation for all data and governance, employees have access to the ‘one true source’ of unique data in real-time. The result? They are able to easily and effectively access data from across the business and query it in natural language.

By making data more transparent and accessible, teams are empowered, AI-driven decision-making is enhanced and, importantly, valuable insights from across the business aren’t being overlooked or lost.

Workforce upskilling and AI literacy must be prioritised

AI tools are only as effective as the people trained to use them. A lack of AI literacy within organisations remains one of the biggest barriers to successful deployment. PwC found that the majority of UK CEOs (78%) reported some form of skills shortage within their organisation, and 68% specify a lack of tech capabilities is inhibiting their ability to progress with digital transformation.

To ensure a smooth transition, businesses should take a structured approach to AI training, aligning upskilling with business goals. This means taking ownership of internal AI education and integrating continuous learning programmes to ensure employees feel thoroughly equipped to engage with new processes.

Focus on building in-house AI expertise to bridge the talent gap

Recruiting specialist AI talent is another significant challenge. A recent study showed that two thirds of recruitment leaders found hiring for AI roles more challenging than for other tech positions. Due to this skills shortage, businesses are paying a premium for those with the relevant, specialist knowledge.

Without this internal expertise, businesses often rely on generic third-party solutions that may not align with their unique operational needs. To address this, businesses  must prioritise recruiting AI specialists with both technical and industry-specific knowledge, while also upskilling existing employees to create a workforce capable of working alongside AI systems – and to ensure there isn’t a major skills gap across the organisation.

Investing in home-grown AI applications can also provide long-term advantages. When developed in-house, preferably within a unified data platform, AI tools and agents can be customised to meet specific business challenges and build institutional AI knowledge. Businesses that develop in-house AI expertise will be better positioned to adapt the technology to their unique needs rather than relying on off-the-shelf solutions that may not fully align with their operational goals, and therefore not achieve the intended results.

Transparency and collaboration are key for involving employees in the AI journey

AI adoption is not just a technological shift – it’s a cultural one too. Despite AI’s potential, 85% of workers believe AI will impact their jobs in the next five years, leading to a sentiment of resistance and uncertainty.

Businesses must be transparent about how AI will be used and what its limitations are. The focus should be on AI as an enabler, not a replacement. By clearly communicating that AI’s role is to automate routine tasks while augmenting human expertise, organisations can alleviate some of these concerns and put in place a more collaborative AI adoption process.

A gradual implementation strategy is key. Businesses should pilot AI tools with employee involvement, allowing teams to provide feedback and refine the integration process. This helps create a sense of ownership and shared responsibility, so AI is viewed as a workforce asset rather than an imposed transformation.

For the UK to solidify its position as an AI superpower, businesses must move beyond idealist AI hype and focus on practical execution. Investing in workforce training, breaking down data silos, and embedding AI literacy into organisational culture will determine whether AI delivers meaningful business value, or remains an untapped opportunity.

UK businesses have a unique opportunity to collectively work towards leading a new era of AI development and data intelligence. But without addressing the fundamental challenges of implementation, we risk falling behind. The time to act is now.

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How UK businesses can effectively overcome the AI implementation gap

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