The AI Opportunity Audit — Free, 30 Minutes, a Written Report in 5 Business Days
A structured 30-minute call with a senior engineer, followed by a written report ranking your top-3 AI opportunities by estimated annual value and effort, plus a 90-day sequencing recommendation. No architecture diagrams, no vendor comparisons, no sales deck — just a prioritized list you can act on with any vendor, including us.
What the audit covers — and what it deliberately doesn't
The call is 30 minutes, structured around your operations, your data, and the processes you're already trying to fix. If you've taken the free AI Readiness Assessment first, your answers are pre-loaded so the call starts at the interesting part. Within 5 business days you receive a written report: your top-3 AI opportunities, each ranked by estimated annual value and effort tier (quick win, medium build, strategic bet), plus a 90-day sequencing recommendation for which to tackle first.
What it explicitly excludes: technical architecture design, a vendor comparison matrix, and anything requiring access to your systems or data. This is a scoping conversation, not a technical audit of your stack — the goal is a decision-ready list, not a 40-page deck.
Who this is for
This audit is built for GCC and Egypt companies with 50 or more staff, where a named owner — a COO, IT Director, Head of Digital, or equivalent — can describe at least one process with real volume behind it (calls, tickets, orders, documents). If that's not quite you yet, the free AI Readiness Assessment and our readiness checklist are the better starting point — they're self-serve, take a few minutes, and point you to the right next step.
What happens after the report
We walk through the report with you on a follow-up call. For most companies, the next step is the AI Readiness Sprint — a fixed $5,000, two-week engagement covering stakeholder interviews, an ROI model, and a working prototype of your #1 use case, with the fee credited 100% against implementation if you proceed within 60 days. When the audit turns up one obvious build with a clear owner and clean data, we sometimes go straight to a fixed-scope implementation proposal instead — the audit report will say so explicitly if that's the case.