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What Leaders Can Learn From the First 1,000 Days of ChatGPT


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This September marks 1,000 days since ChatGPT entered public consciousness. In that short time, the world has undergone a seismic shift. AI, once a buzzword, has become a foundational force — reshaping workflows, boardroom agendas and entire industries. No organization or country, large or small, was immune. Generative AI, alongside Claude, Gemini and open-source models, hasn’t merely added features. It has reset the pace of innovation, widened performance gaps and exposed how few institutions were equipped to turn experiments into execution.

Across verticals — from education and enterprise to pharma and public sector — one insight has proven consistent: The organizations that thrive with AI don’t start with tools. They start with people.

Since the release of ChatGPT, I’ve worked with hundreds of organizations worldwide as an AI keynote speaker, transformation advisor and strategic consultant. My work has included delivering keynotes, facilitating AI innovation workshops and guiding C-suite leaders across industries through the turbulence of AI adoption. From global corporations and top universities to national governments and biotech pioneers, the same patterns — and the same roadblocks — have emerged.

This article opens the “1,000 Days of AI” series: a practical, cross-vertical exploration of what AI has already changed, what lies ahead and what leaders must do now to build alignment, trust and momentum in the age of intelligent systems.

Related: The World Is Splitting Between Those Who Use ChatGPT to Get Better, Smarter, Richer — and Everyone Else

This isn’t an IT project

Many organizations began their AI journey by outsourcing it to IT. Generative tools like ChatGPT were handed to CIOs. Roadmaps were requested. Pilots were announced. Platforms were compared. Meanwhile, momentum stalled.

In contrast, the most adaptive organizations began by engaging employees. They looked at workflows, not tech stacks. They asked: Where does friction live, and who understands it best? Then they launched internal sprints to solve meaningful problems. Not everything scaled, but what did revealed where the real opportunity lies.

AI is not a dashboard or chatbot. It is a system-level catalyst. It touches every department — legal, HR, finance, operations, marketing. It raises questions about ethics, accountability and the future of work. It requires organizations to stop thinking in silos and start working across them.

The most effective transformation doesn’t come from strategy decks; it comes from people trusted to rethink their daily work. When organizations create space for this kind of thinking, momentum follows.

The intrapreneur era has arrived

Some of the most impactful applications of AI in the last 1,000 days didn’t come from senior leadership or external consultants. They came from within. Employees who noticed inefficiencies, tested generative tools and found a better way forward. These internal changemakers — intrapreneurs — are rebuilding their organizations from the inside out.

During the strategy sessions I’ve led, it’s often the customer support agent who builds an AI-powered knowledge base, the compliance analyst who uses large language models to automate documentation or the professor who reinvents grading. These aren’t isolated moments; they’re the new standard of innovation.

The most agile organizations surface these efforts early, reward the behavior and scale what works. They don’t wait for formal initiatives. They build cultures where permission is replaced by participation. And they move quickly — not recklessly, but with confidence.

Related: How Corporate ‘Intrapreneurs’ Can Harness the Power of AI to Transform Their Businesses and Supercharge Their Careers

AI is a multiplier of culture

AI doesn’t transform culture — it reflects it. An organization grounded in rigidity and control will experience more of the same. One built on curiosity, collaboration and transparency will scale faster, learn faster and lead the market.

The highest-performing organizations start with a clear principle: alignment precedes acceleration. They ask employees what slows them down and then act on the answers. They replace static org charts with cross-functional teams. They move from policies to prototypes.

Governance isn’t an afterthought — it’s embedded in the process. Legal, HR and compliance are not blockers. They’re design partners. Together, they build systems that are ethical, inclusive and scalable from day one.

AI is not just a toolset. It’s a leadership challenge. The organizations that rise to meet it build trust and transformation in parallel.

What’s working now

After delivering hundreds of AI keynotes and partnering with organizations across the globe, a new set of success principles has emerged:

  • Start with employees. Those closest to the work understand the friction and how to fix it.

  • Distribute capability. Don’t limit training to tech teams. The best ideas often come from HR, legal and finance.

  • Run AI sprints like business design. These aren’t software pilots. They’re rapid experiments in new ways of working.

  • Make governance collaborative. Build ethical and compliance guardrails with — not after — the business.

  • Scale internal wins. Share success stories. Build intrapreneur networks. Turn momentum into muscle.

These practices aren’t aspirational. They’re already creating measurable outcomes for organizations willing to lead the change.

Related: 2025 AI Innovation Insights — Lessons Learned From Over 127 Global Speaking Sessions

The next 1,000 days demand boldness

The experimentation phase is over. The next 1,000 days require depth, speed and alignment. Pilots must become platforms. Strategy must move beyond decks and into daily action.

The real divide is no longer between AI adopters and skeptics. It’s between those who integrate AI into culture and decision-making — and those who simply deploy tools without changing the system around them.

What defines leadership in this next wave isn’t technology. It’s the ability to build trust in AI, connect siloed teams and redesign work at scale. The future of work is already arriving. The organizations that act now will shape it.

Those who move with courage and clarity will thrive. Others will find themselves part of someone else’s success story.

Coming next in the “1,000 Days of AI” series: How AI is transforming education — and what schools, faculty and students must do now to stay ahead.

This September marks 1,000 days since ChatGPT entered public consciousness. In that short time, the world has undergone a seismic shift. AI, once a buzzword, has become a foundational force — reshaping workflows, boardroom agendas and entire industries. No organization or country, large or small, was immune. Generative AI, alongside Claude, Gemini and open-source models, hasn’t merely added features. It has reset the pace of innovation, widened performance gaps and exposed how few institutions were equipped to turn experiments into execution.

Across verticals — from education and enterprise to pharma and public sector — one insight has proven consistent: The organizations that thrive with AI don’t start with tools. They start with people.

Since the release of ChatGPT, I’ve worked with hundreds of organizations worldwide as an AI keynote speaker, transformation advisor and strategic consultant. My work has included delivering keynotes, facilitating AI innovation workshops and guiding C-suite leaders across industries through the turbulence of AI adoption. From global corporations and top universities to national governments and biotech pioneers, the same patterns — and the same roadblocks — have emerged.

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This story originally appeared on Entrepreneur

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