Enable teams

Bring AI into daily work clearly, safely, and practically

Training works when people learn on their own tasks. So real work cases are at the centre, with clear rules, good prompts, and checked results instead of tool demos.

What it is about

Many people know AI can help. At the same time, uncertainty and very different usage remain. Good training explains clearly, lets people practise, and anchors responsible use.

Typical starting situations

  • Teams use AI inconsistently.

  • People are interested but unsure.

  • Super users should support others.

  • Shared quality rules are missing.

  • AI results are checked too little.

How it works

  1. Clarify the need. Audience, prior knowledge, allowed tools, typical tasks, and sensitive areas.

  2. Tailor the training. Content fits roles, work context, and real practice cases.

  3. Practise together. Participants work on realistic tasks and improve results step by step.

  4. Secure the transfer. The result includes rules, examples, and next exercises.

Outcome

  • Better judge where AI fits

  • Phrase tasks more clearly and write better prompts

  • Check results more critically

  • Use AI more safely in routines

  • Share knowledge in the team more easily

Suitable formats

  • AI entry for teams: basics, typical uses, first exercises, safe use. Duration: 90 minutes to half a day.

  • AI for leaders: potential, limits, responsibility, prioritisation. Duration: 90 minutes to 3 hours.

  • Super user training: depth for everyone who supports others. Duration: half a day to several sessions.

Method

A real task, visible proof, clear anchoring. I start with a concrete task, check the difference in everyday work, and secure the result so it can keep being used.

Safe start

For first exercises I prefer anonymised, synthetic, or approved material. Sensitive data is only used once the framework is clear.

Next steps

A good fit after this: Safe AI use, Impact Day, or your audience.

CONVERSATION

Training has to fit the work

We clarify which group should be trained, which tasks matter, and which guardrails already exist.