"AI consultant" can mean a lot of things — from someone who runs a training session to a firm that builds machine-learning systems. Here's what the role actually involves for a small or midsize business, when it's worth hiring one, and how to tell a good one from a salesperson.
Strip away the buzzwords and an AI consultant is paid to answer one question well: of everything your business does, which parts should AI handle, and in what order? Anyone can list the tools. The work is knowing your operation well enough to spot the two or three places where AI saves real money — and being honest about the dozen places it won't.
A real engagement usually moves through four stages, and the first one matters most. It starts with assessment: sitting with you to learn how the business actually runs, where the hours disappear, and which work is repetitive enough for AI to handle well. Picture a distributor whose team spends mornings matching invoices by hand, or a services firm that rebuilds the same report every Monday. Those unglamorous, structured tasks are where AI tends to earn its place, and finding the right ones is most of the job.
After the assessment comes prioritization — turning what was found into a short list of what to do first and what to ignore — then the build, where the workflows actually get stood up and handed to your team, and then ongoing advisory as the business changes and the tools improve. Harvard Business Review sorts business AI into three underlying jobs, automating processes, drawing insight from data, and engaging customers and employees. Knowing which of those fits your business, and in what sequence, is the part you're actually paying for.
An AI consultant earns their keep when you know AI matters but can't see where to start, when you've tried a few things and nothing stuck, or when you need senior-level direction without taking on a full-time hire. The reason this role exists is that most AI efforts fail for strategic, not technical, reasons — and an outside expert whose only job is your business can keep you out of that 80%.
It's less useful if you already have a clear, validated plan and just need hands to build it, or if you're not actually ready to change how any of your processes work. AI consulting is about reshaping work, not bolting a tool onto an unchanged process.
A good consultant asks about your operations before mentioning any tool. If the first conversation is a product demo, that's a sign.
Every recommendation should connect to hours saved, costs cut, or revenue gained. Vague "productivity" talk is a red flag.
Watch for incentives. Someone with a software license to push will steer you toward their product, not your best answer.
If they can't explain the plan without jargon, they either don't understand it well enough or don't want you to.
Tell me where you're stuck. I'll give you a straight read on whether — and where — AI fits.
Let's TalkThe question I open every engagement with: a two-minute read on the difference between seeing ahead and reacting.
Pricing models, market ranges, and how to think about ROI.
A step-by-step way to pick a first project and sequence wins.
The failure rate is high — and the cause is rarely the technology.