How to Make the Business Case for AI to Your Board
Introduction
You're convinced that AI is the right investment for your business. Your co-director, business partner, or board isn't — yet. The challenge is that most AI business cases are built on hype: press releases, LinkedIn posts, and vendor marketing. A credible internal business case for AI needs to be built on your specific numbers, your specific use case, and a realistic projection of return.

The one-page AI business case structure
- The problem: what specific business problem does this solve? (e.g. 'We miss 40% of inbound enquiries outside office hours')
- The solution: what does the AI deployment do, specifically? (not 'we use AI' — 'we deploy an AI consultant that captures and qualifies leads 24/7')
The cost: total annual cost including platform, onboarding, and management
- The return: revenue enabled + cost reduced, with conservative, central, and optimistic scenarios
The payback period: when does it break even?
The risk: what are the failure modes and how are they mitigated?
The numbers that convince a sceptic
Don't lead with capability. Lead with the cost of inaction. 'We currently miss an estimated [X] enquiries per month outside office hours. At our average client value of [Y] and a conversion rate of [Z]%, this represents [£ amount] per year in revenue we are not capturing. The AI deployment costs [£ amount] per year and captures [conservative estimate] of this.' This is a risk reduction argument, not a technology argument. It's harder to argue against.
Handling the 'but AI is risky' objection
The governance argument is your best asset here. 'SkyX's deployment includes a full audit trail, human escalation rules, GDPR-compliant infrastructure, and a 36-scenario QA pass before go-live. It is more governed than our current human process, which has no audit trail and no escalation framework.' Frame AI governance as risk reduction, not risk addition.
Proposing a pilot
If the board or partner remains resistant, propose a 3-month pilot: deploy AI for one service area only, with defined success metrics, and review ROI at Month 3. A pilot reduces the perceived commitment and creates a data-driven decision point. In practice, almost all SkyX pilots that reach Month 3 proceed to full deployment.
Call to Action
SkyX provides a business case template and ROI projection tool for prospective clients. Request it at skyx.co.uk.
CLUSTER 9 — INDUSTRY VERTICALS II (5 NEW SECTORS)
Industry Vertical Landing Pages — Set 2
Five additional high-intent sector pages, each targeting a specific industry keyword. These complement the five verticals in Set 1 (accountants, estate agents, recruitment, healthcare, solicitors) and extend SkyX's topical authority across a wider sector footprint.
Article Title
Target Keyword
Word Count
Intent
AI for financial advisers and IFAs UK
AI for financial advisers UK
1,300
Commercial
AI for hotels and hospitality UK
AI for hotels hospitality UK
1,300
Commercial
AI for construction and trades businesses UK
AI for construction trades UK
1,200
Commercial
AI for retail and e-commerce UK
AI for retail ecommerce UK
1,200
Commercial
AI for educational institutions and training providers UK
AI for education training UK
1,200
Commercial
Next steps
For a governed AI rollout, start with a scoped review of your customer journeys, data boundaries and human escalation points.
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