Omri Kohl is the CEO and Co-Founder of Pyramid Analytics, driving the future of data and AI for enterprise decision-making.
Companies are spending billions on AI, but many aren’t getting the results they need to succeed. They’re bullish on using AI to generate insights and accelerate strategic business decision making, but the gap between delivering analytical conclusions and executing the correct action has only widened.
A wealth of shiny, AI-powered toys isn’t making business decisions better or even helping teams arrive at them faster. Instead, stakeholders are growing increasingly disillusioned with their AI outputs, even as those outputs become quicker and easier to access.
With all of these shortcomings, the AI being used is the equivalent of a brand-new employee who’s unsure of the meanings of metrics, the relationships between data and the best way to turn data into value. Business context is the missing layer that turns insights into usable predictions, serving as the shared understanding that forms the foundation for human-AI collaboration. It’s crucial for reliable analytical conclusions.
Without it, AI generates answers that are impressive and rapid yet stunningly irrelevant. Human stakeholders stumble through decision making despite the mountains of data that they feed into AI and the reams of insights at their fingertips, unable to translate insights into action.
Here are some of the deeper reasons why context is so significant for AI-powered decisions.
Faster insights don’t equal smart decision making.
AI copilots, analytics tools and decision intelligence platforms deliver rapid outputs, but those outputs don’t always lead to action. All too often, AI-powered insights only add to the noise without guiding stakeholders toward clear decisions.
Each organization operates within a specific, nuanced environment, and when insights aren’t adapted to that context, they bog stakeholders down instead of guiding them through uncertainty. It’s like having that brand-new employee set strategy without having been through onboarding.
Decision makers need clarity and certainty, not more opinions. They find themselves struggling through a morass of conflicting interpretations, which send them back to their AI tools again and again for repeated analytics cycles. This confusion holds them back from making timely decisions, as insight velocity outpaces decision readiness.
Humans-in-the-loop can add more confusion.
The natural reaction is to bring in more humans to validate and mediate AI outputs. The instinct is well-grounded because human judgement is essential for effective decision loops, but unless it’s accompanied by consistent context, it’s also doomed to failure.
Imagine if that new employee got their context from dozens of different people, all of whom have different opinions on what’s important and which data matters. It wouldn’t work out so well.
Different stakeholders inevitably bring their own definitions and assumptions, further blurring the picture of the business context. This results in conflicting conclusions, slower coordination across teams and a lack of trust in AI outputs. Humans who aren’t aligned in their understanding of the business context can create more chaos instead of imposing order upon it.
It’s crucial for the people who manage the “context layer” to share the same approach and methodology, bringing in the company’s complex cultural and social context. Otherwise, the data will become more tangled, and insights will become less useful.
Without context, data lacks meaning.
Many companies operate under the illusion that clean, integrated data is all you need to produce aligned decisions. If only this were truly the case. Without a context layer, AI outputs can be technically correct but practically unusable or even damaging. A meaningful context layer should include business rules and logic, long-term objectives and benchmarks, metric definitions and operational constraints and priorities.
For example, an AI-powered system could conclude that one retail store location is underperforming in terms of revenue, but it doesn’t consider that this store is in a busy area. Customers browse in-store and then order online, with the store operating as a showroom with excellent customer service that raises brand perception.
This illustrates the risks of missing context in AI strategies. Decisions end up based on inconsistent interpretations, leading to increased rework, inefficiency, reduced trust in both data and AI systems and difficulty scaling AI beyond isolated use cases.
Companies must build a context-driven AI foundation.
The solution involves establishing a shared semantic layer across the organization, ensuring that every team prioritizes the same data sources, applies the same logic and adheres to the same set of definitions. This consistent business context should apply to humans and AI alike, forming the touchstone for business decision making.
When every department refers to the same business context, it shifts the decision-making process from human-in-the-loop to the next stage of context-aware collaboration. Humans aren’t merely involved or overseeing AI operations; they’re operating from the same foundation.
When humans and AI share a unified business context, it makes decisions faster and better aligned with business objectives. Outputs become actionable, feeding into rapid and trusted decision loops and setting the stage for reliable AI agentic systems. The future will bring far more context-aware AI systems where the AI is grounded in the governed frameworks of business logic, making outputs explainable, traceable and consistent.
Context bridges the gap between insight and impact.
Context is the oil that will fuel the successful evolution of AI-driven decision intelligence solutions. As AI continues to advance and change, organizations will derive their competitive advantage from how effectively they turn insights into action.
With business context connecting AI workflows to real-world decisions, a unified, built-in semantic layer could be the differentiating factor between impressive-looking insights and real world impact.
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