July 14, 2025

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Built for Intelligence: What It Really Means to Be an AI-Native Organization

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By Mounir Hijazi, CEO – GCC, TP

Artificial intelligence has passed the tipping point from experimentation to expectation. In nearly every boardroom, it is no longer a question of whether AI will be adopted, but how quickly, how widely, and to what effect. Yet as more companies invest in large language models, predictive analytics, and machine learning engines, one uncomfortable truth continues to surface: while many are using AI, very few are becoming AI-native.

Becoming AI-native is not about integrating a handful of intelligent tools into isolated workflows. It is not a matter of deploying more bots, or accelerating existing tasks with algorithms. It is a deeper, more structural shift, one that requires organizations to rethink how they operate, how they make decisions, and how they design for the future. It means treating intelligence, both human and artificial, not as a layer, but as a foundation.

To be AI-native is to recognize that intelligence is no longer confined to people, nor should it be siloed in analytics departments or R&D labs. Instead, intelligence must be embedded across the operating model, from the way customer journeys are built to how policies are enforced, how teams collaborate, and how value is created.

This transformation begins with people. In organizations where AI is truly native, employees are not displaced by automation but are repositioned to contribute in more meaningful ways. The skills most in demand are no longer just technical or transactional; they are interpretive, ethical, creative, and empathetic. Workers must be equipped not only to use intelligent tools, but to question them, guide them, and at times override them. They need to know how to translate machine-generated insights into human-centered decisions. This shift in role requires a corresponding shift in mindset, from fear of replacement to confidence in augmented capability, and that change only happens in cultures that place trust, transparency, and psychological safety at the heart of transformation.

Beyond people, the AI-native enterprise must redesign its processes to be dynamic rather than fixed. Traditional workflows, designed for predictability, must give way to systems that learn, evolve, and adapt in real time. Feedback loops should no longer be annual or even quarterly but must be continuous, embedded into the very fabric of the operation. When an intelligent system identifies a trend or anomaly, the organization must be able to respond with agility, adjusting its behavior as fast as the context demands. In this model, AI does not replace process design rather becomes a partner in it.

But if intelligence is to be trusted, it must also be governed. In an AI-native environment, policy is not reactive; it is proactive, anticipating the risks and responsibilities of machine-driven action. Governance must go beyond compliance to become a design principle that ensures transparency, explains decision logic, safeguards fairness, and protects human oversight. It is not enough to build systems that are powerful; they must also be accountable.

The most visible impact of this transformation lies not in how companies operate internally, but in what they create. When intelligence is embedded by design, the products and services that emerge are fundamentally different: more predictive, more personalized, and more aligned with human behavior. From proactive healthcare to adaptive education, from real-time public services to emotionally attuned customer experiences, the AI-native enterprise does not simply digitize the past, it imagines new categories of value that were previously impossible.

Around the world, we are beginning to see national ecosystems embrace this philosophy. In the UAE, for instance, AI is not treated as a single ministry’s mandate or a one-off initiative; it is being woven into the vision of the state, integrated into how infrastructure is built, how citizens are served, and how leadership defines progress.

This is the real lesson of the AI-native journey: technology alone cannot transform an organization. Only when its people, processes, governance, and imagination evolve in tandem does intelligence become more than a tool and becomes a way of operating.

And in that shift lies the true competitive advantage of the decade ahead.

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