Vendor-supplied ROI.
The number is wrong. Both you and the vendor know this. Signing a contract on it is a career risk for whoever owns the budget. And an integrity problem for whoever owns the financial narrative.
An independent, defensible, board-ready benefit case. Built around your baselines, not the vendor's. Refreshed against actuals after deployment.
Every AI vendor will give you a benefit case. It will be inflated. They will compare against fictional baselines, count benefits multiple times, and assume scale that has never been observed in any deployment of their product.
Your CFO knows this. Your board knows this. Whoever signs the contract is liable for an ROI claim that everyone in the room privately doubts.
What you need is an independent, defensible, board-ready quantification, built around your operating data, your risk-adjusted assumptions, and your measurable outcomes. Built before you sign. Refreshed after you deploy.
That's the engagement.
The number is wrong. Both you and the vendor know this. Signing a contract on it is a career risk for whoever owns the budget. And an integrity problem for whoever owns the financial narrative.
Productivity of what? Compared to what baseline? Producing what measurable outcome that lives on a P&L? Most AI ROI claims fail this test, and 'we'll figure out the metrics during deployment' is the polite version of 'we don't have a way to measure this.'
The benefit case is built once, at contract time. Six months later, nobody has measured against it. The original claim becomes mythology, quoted in board decks but never validated. The vendor renewal happens on inertia, not evidence.
An independent benefit case with explicit, defensible assumptions tied to your operating data. Every input traceable to a source you can defend in a board meeting.
A side-by-side comparison: vendor claims vs. our analysis, with deltas explained line by line. The kind of artifact that ends the negotiation and gets the procurement team to a 'yes' or a 'no' cleanly.
A risk-adjusted ROI range (best case, expected case, worst case) your board can interrogate. Single-point ROI estimates are a rhetorical move, not an analytical one. Yours will have honest bounds.
A measurement plan: what to track, how, on what cadence, who owns the report. So that 90 days from now, somebody can answer 'is it working?' with data instead of vibes.
A re-quantification 90 days after deployment with actuals vs. projections, and a clear recommendation on whether to expand the deployment, hold it where it is, or sunset it. The honest answer often saves more money than the original benefit case did.
Two phases. Phase 1 is pre-contract: a two-week fixed-fee analysis producing the benefit case, vendor comparison, and risk-adjusted ROI range. Delivered before the contract gets signed. Phase 2 is post-deployment: a one-week engagement at month 3 to re-quantify against actuals, with a clear "expand / hold / sunset" recommendation.
Both phases stand alone. Our incentive is the integrity of the number, not the close of the deal.
The system that's been on the roadmap for two years. The migration that's already failed once. The AI strategy that didn't make it past the deck. That's the one we want.
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