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“AI Alone Cannot Save Disjointed Data Systems,” says Coginiti Founder

Rick Hall headshot
Rick Hall / Rick Hall

Artificial Intelligence has grabbed the attention of every business around the globe, driven by visions of automation and smarter decision-making. This has fueled a race to integrate AI into their operations. And yet, as per Gartner’s latest update, at least 30% of AI initiatives will be abandoned this year.

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Why? “It’s not because AI doesn’t work,” states Rick Hall, founder of Coginiti. “It’s because most companies haven’t done the foundational work. They expect AI to clean up their mess, but it can’t. Companies need to clean up their own data before inviting AI in.”

 

Hall believes AI is still in the early phases of a decade-long transformation, one that will redefine nearly every business operation. But for that transformation to succeed, organizations must first tackle three persistent problems: poor alignment to business goals, bad data, and failed integration.

 

Companies often rush to implement AI without understanding how it will actually improve their business. “They start with the technology, not the outcome,” Hall states. “They can’t articulate what success looks like.” Without a clear hypothesis of what AI will do and the value it will drive, the initiative flounders.

 

Messy, redundant, and poorly labeled data is one of the most common obstacles to AI success. One of Coginiti’s clients, for example, had been using a cloud-based sales system for years. They wanted to deploy AI to optimize their sales pipeline. But their sales opportunity record had ballooned to 250 columns with four different fields just for purchase orders.

“Over time, processes change, people add fields, create nicknames, and now AI has no idea which one to use,” Hall explains. “You’re asking an algorithm to make sense of something even your sales team doesn’t fully understand.” Without clearly named, clean, and integrated data, no AI can deliver value.

Coginiti logo
Cogniti / Cogniti

Even when an AI model is successfully trained in a pilot program, many businesses struggle to scale it. That’s because they haven’t built clear bridges between their test environments and real-world operations. “You might have something that works in isolation, but integrating it into your existing systems, your workflows, your infrastructure, that’s where everything breaks down,” Hall says.

 

To solve these problems, Coginiti helps organizations build a digital twin, a virtual representation of how the business actually works. A digital twin isn’t just a model or a dashboard; it’s a semantic representation that maps your business processes, data, and systems in a structured, meaningful way.

 

“When you have a digital twin integrated into your system,” Hall says, “you can simulate change. You can say: ‘If we improve this process, we’ll see this benefit.’ It aligns your AI efforts to business value from the beginning.”

 

The digital twin acts as a translator between your messy, physical reality and a logical business model that AI can understand. It defines your data layer clearly and exposes it to AI tools in a way that is consistent and scalable.

 

A digital twin starts with understanding how your business actually runs. What are the key value chains? What are the metrics for improvement? This means data will be well-defined, consistently named, and logically organized. “The semantic model is the heart of a digital twin,” Hall says. “It’s what allows AI to interface with your business meaningfully.”

 

A true digital twin links clean, logical models to real-world data across systems: CRMs, ERPs, call centers, data warehouses, and more. A digital twin further pulls from across departments and platforms, ensuring a single, unified source of truth. With the integration in place, businesses can use AI agents to model changes, test new processes, and develop rapid pilots that can easily be deployed in production.

 

Ultimately, AI is not a magic bullet. It’s a powerful tool, but only as powerful as the foundation it rests on. “Think of AI as a new room in your house. If the blueprint is vague and the bricks are cracked, even the best architect can’t build a stable structure,” Hall compares. “The companies that invest in doing this the right way today will be tomorrow’s leaders.” Coginiti can help you with the transformation. 

Digital Trends partners with external contributors. All contributor content is reviewed by the Digital Trends editorial staff.
Chris Gallagher
Chris Gallagher is a New York native with a business degree from Sacred Heart University, now thriving as a professional…
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