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Why PoCs Rarely Become Production Systems

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Home » Why PoCs Rarely Become Production Systems

Why PoCs Rarely Become Production Systems

By News RoomMay 29, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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Arun Goyal, Founder & MD at Octal IT Solution, driving enterprise transformation through AI-powered platforms and product engineering.

Companies across basically every industry have invested heavily in AI in recent years, rolling out pilots, testing generative AI and showing off encouraging proof-of-concept (PoC) demonstrations. Still, quite a few of those efforts never quite turn into production setups that actually deliver measurable business outcomes.

Gartner found that, by the end of 2025, 50% of generative AI projects were abandoned at the PoC stage, mainly due to weak data quality, flimsy risk controls or escalating costs.

In my experience working with enterprise AI systems, the problem is rarely, if ever, about building the model itself. The real headache starts after the demo, when organizations try to weave AI into day-to-day business operations.

This is known as the AI execution gap: The mismatch between a technically solid pilot and an AI system that can keep running reliably when you scale it across the enterprise.

Why AI Gets Stuck Between Experimentation And Production

A PoC validates whether a model can work under controlled conditions. But production systems have to deliver consistently across messy, unpredictable environments, across multiple business units and large-scale workflows.

One of the biggest misunderstandings about AI adoption is that really high model accuracy automatically means business readiness. Even a small failure rate can turn into operational drag, like more manual reviews, more escalation workflows and extra compliance checks. Over time, employees might end up spending more time repairing AI-generated outputs than just doing the task in the first place.

One of the biggest reasons PoCs that performed well during testing stall is that the operational data was structured differently across systems, sometimes subtly. Sales, finance, operations and customer service teams often keep separate data standards and different process flows, which can introduce instability once everything scales up. ​

For example, McDonald’s ended its program to automate drive-thru ordering with voice AI chatbots in 2024. Some analysts have noted the system had accuracy issues that came from real-world scenarios that might not have been present during testing, such as different accents or dialects or the machine hearing an order from a customer at a different machine.

The Data And Infrastructure Problem

Poor data quality remains one of the biggest obstacles for scaling AI.

Usually, pilot systems are trained on datasets that are prepped in a careful manner, while production systems end up depending on data pulled from older platforms, third-party integrations and databases that can be disconnected between departments.

I’ve also seen situations where the same business metric showed up across different systems with inconsistent definitions, and that tends to cause reliability headaches when things go to scale.

In one larger enterprise project, for instance, customer records across the CRM and ERP systems used different naming conventions, and they also followed separate categorization rules. During the pilot phase, the dataset had been standardized manually, so the model gave accurate outputs. But once the solution moved toward production, those inconsistencies across the day-to-day operational systems started to distort prediction quality and also workflow reliability.

It wasn’t really the algorithm at fault, but the enterprise-wide data governance wasn’t there, or wasn’t strong enough.

On top of that, infrastructure costs tend to climb fast when AI keeps scaling. Many organizations now run into a hidden operational expense of running AI systems, monitoring them, refreshing or retraining models and maintaining the systems once they’re in production.

This is where MLOps can play a large role. Production AI systems need continuous monitoring for things like model drift, infrastructure usage, latency and prediction quality. Teams that handle AI as a continuously managed operational competency are often in a better spot for sustained, long-term outcomes.

Hidden Technical Debt In AI Systems

Many enterprise AI projects stumble not just because of model limitations, but because teams run into some unexpected technical debt once everything is actually deployed.

PoC systems tend to get built in isolation, and they are usually not meant to blend with the rest of the enterprise world ERP platforms, CRM systems, identity management frameworks, security protocols and compliance requirements all at once.

In one case, the AI workflow worked during testing, but then deployment got stuck for weeks because data access permissions were different across departments. The AI system needed customer information across several business units, yet internal governance rules put constraints on how that information could be shared and processed.

The technical problem itself was pretty manageable, but the bigger problem was organizational readiness.

Governance, compliance and security shouldn’t be treated like last-minute, final-stage deployment chores. Organizations that loop in governance and compliance teams early in the AI lifecycle often scale with a lot more efficiency, and without awkward last-minute surprises.

The Human Factor

Even technically successful AI systems can still flop if employees do not trust what the outputs are saying, or if the whole technology ends up disrupting existing workflows. ​

Especially in industries like healthcare and finance, explainability and reliability often end up mattering more than the automation part itself. I noticed that adoption challenges usually show up when organizations concentrate too much on raw model performance, while ignoring workflow integration and everyday usability.

Closing The AI Execution Gap

The future of enterprise AI won’t be measured by how many pilots organizations launch, but by how well they can operationalize AI reliably when the deployment reaches scale. ​

In my view, organizations that gain long-term advantage are not always the ones building the most advanced models. More often, they are the ones creating disciplined systems for governance, infrastructure and operational execution, so AI can keep delivering dependable business results over time. ​​

Forbes Technology Council is an invitation-only community for world-class CIOs, CTOs and technology executives. Do I qualify?

Arun Goyal
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