Most teams don't have an AI problem. They have an AI habit problem. The tools are extraordinary and the licences are already being paid for, yet the value people get out of them lands somewhere between "handy" and "I tried it once". The gap is never the model. It's that nobody ever sat the team down and taught them how to actually work with the thing. That's what a proper day of training is for, and here's what genuinely changes over the course of it.
A licence is not a skill
Buying everyone an AI subscription feels like progress, but it's the equivalent of handing a team a set of power tools and walking off. A few naturals will work it out. Most will use ten per cent of what's there, get an underwhelming result, and quietly drift back to the old way. The capability was never the issue; the missing piece was someone showing them how to brief it, what to trust it with, and where the edges are. You can close most of that gap in a single focused day.
Morning: from random prompting to a method
The day starts where most people are stuck: typing a vague request, getting a vague answer, and concluding the tool is overrated. By late morning that's replaced with an actual method: how to frame a task so the answer is sharp, how to give the tool the right context and hold back the noise, and how to push back and iterate instead of accepting the first draft. It stops being a magic box you poke and becomes a capable colleague you know how to direct.
After lunch: your real work, not toy examples
This is the part that makes a full day worth it. The afternoon isn't generic demos; it's your team's actual work. The report that takes a morning to write. The inbox that never empties. The spreadsheet nobody enjoys. The proposal, the meeting notes, the policy draft. We work through the real tasks with the real tools, so people leave having already done the thing once, with you, rather than nodding along to an example they'll never touch again. Skills learned on your own work are the ones that survive contact with Monday.
What's different by five o'clock
By the end of the day a team has three things it didn't have that morning. A method they can repeat tomorrow without us in the room. A clear sense of which tool to reach for and, just as importantly, when not to bother. And the guardrails: what's safe to put in, what isn't, where the governance line sits, so the confidence comes with judgement attached. That combination is the difference between a novelty and a genuine, compounding advantage.
Why a full day, and why lunch
You can't build a working habit in a lunch-and-learn. The morning rewires how people think about the tool; the afternoon proves it on their own work, and you need both halves for it to stick. We keep everyone together over lunch on purpose, because some of the best moments are the unplanned "wait, can it do this?" conversations that happen when a team is energised and in the same room. It's a day designed to change how people work, not to tick a training box.
The teams that pull ahead didn't buy a better tool than everyone else. They spent one focused day learning to use the one they already had.
If that sounds like the day your team needs, that's exactly what our full-day AI workshops deliver: Copilot, Claude or OpenAI, hands-on, on your real work, with the governance sorted. Pick the tool, pick the date, and we'll do the rest.
