Why Most Enterprise AI Projects Fail (And How to Fix It)
March 2025
According to Gartner, over 85% of AI projects never make it to production. After talking to hundreds of enterprise teams, the reasons are almost always the same.
The three failure modes
1. Generic models on specific problems
Most teams start with a foundation model (GPT-4, Gemini, Claude) and try to prompt-engineer their way to domain accuracy. It works for demos. It fails in production.
Your medical imaging data, your legal contracts, your manufacturing defects — these require models trained on your data, not on the internet.
2. Infrastructure that becomes a second job
Building MLOps from scratch is a trap. Teams spend 80% of their time on infrastructure — managing training jobs, versioning models, scaling endpoints — instead of solving the actual business problem.
3. No path from prototype to production
A notebook that works on your laptop is not a product. Most teams hit a wall when they try to scale from a POC to something their colleagues can actually use.
What works
The enterprise AI projects that succeed share a pattern:
- Domain-specific data — they train on their own proprietary datasets
- Managed infrastructure — they use platforms that abstract away the ops burden
- API-first deployment — models are exposed as endpoints that existing systems can call
How ALTAI addresses this
ALTAI is built around this pattern. You bring your data. We handle training infrastructure, optimization, and deployment. The output is a production-ready API endpoint — not a notebook, not a prototype.