Consultants flood companies with diagrams, frameworks, and strategy slides. They recommend best practices, list tools you should adopt, and show you what others have built. But consultants rarely stay long enough for the hard work — building infrastructure, fixing data inconsistencies, resolving hallucinations, or scaling pipelines.
The result is a cycle: companies pay for advice, build small demos, hit technical walls, bring in new consultants, repeat. The system never stabilizes because no one takes long-term ownership of the AI stack. CIOs and CTOs get frustrated, and teams lose confidence.
AI requires continuity, not consulting churn. Infrastructure must evolve with your business, and that’s not a one-time engagement. This post explains why advice isn’t enough — and why stable AI infrastructure is the missing piece.