AI enablement workshops
A one-day working session for a team that wants to stop talking about AI and start using it on their actual jobs.
What a workshop is (and what it isn't)
What it is: a one-day working session, in person or on Google Meet, with a team of up to fifteen people. Half the day is me walking the team through how I actually use AI — on real tasks, not demos. The other half is the team working on their own tasks while I circulate and unblock them. At the end of the day, every person in the room has at least one working example of AI doing something useful on their real job.
What it isn't: a keynote. A strategy deck. A "What is ChatGPT?" 101 session. An overview of the AI market. A sales pitch for a platform. A one-way lecture. I'm not that person.
I run these for teams that have already decided they want to use AI, want to do it safely, and want someone in the room who can show them how without making them feel behind.
The Workshop Prep Agent changes the shape of the day
Every workshop I've run has been built around a specific discovery: most of the participants show up with a problem they haven't articulated, and half the value of the session comes from surfacing the problem together.
So I built something that does the surfacing ahead of time.
A few days before the workshop, every participant gets an email from an AI agent I built. The agent asks them what they're stuck on with AI. It remembers what they said. It coaches them through one or two rounds of trying to use their existing tools. When two participants are wrestling with the same problem, the agent quietly suggests they talk to each other. By workshop day, I already know what the team is struggling with — often more clearly than they do.
This is real. I've run it live at my own workshops (details on the Workshop Prep Agent deep page). It turns the first half of the workshop from "what do you all want to work on?" into "here are the four things we already know you're stuck on — let's fix them today."
What you get
- Pre-workshop prep via the Workshop Prep Agent. Every participant interacts with the agent for a week before the workshop. By the time I show up, I know each person's actual tasks and the team's aggregate patterns.
- A one-day working session. Morning: how I use AI on the kinds of jobs your team does. Afternoon: the team works on their own tasks with me in the room.
- Bilingual delivery. English or Quebec French, or a mix. Your choice.
- A short written summary afterward. For you: what the team worked on, what each person has in their hands, and what follow-up would look like if you want to keep going.
Pricing
Workshops are priced per-day, not per-participant. The starting number is in the four-figure range; the exact number depends on the pre-workshop prep depth, whether I'm delivering in person or remote, and the size of the team. One conversation is usually enough to land on a number.
If you already know the shape of what you want, one message is enough.
The workshop isn't the core of what I do anymore
I should be honest about this. In early 2025 the workshop was my main offer. It still works — I keep running them for clients who specifically want that format — but it's no longer the first thing I recommend.
The first thing I recommend is how I work: a short introduction call, a working session on a real task from your business, and then follow-on sessions if it's a fit. That's a lower-commitment way to find out whether I'm useful to you than a one-day workshop is.
The workshop is still here for the teams that want it. If you'd rather start smaller, start smaller.
The follow-up most clients want
The thing most workshop clients ask for within a week of the session is: "Can we keep that pre-workshop agent, but make it an ongoing team tool?"
Yes. That's exactly what the Workshop Prep Agent customization path is. Same agent, same capabilities, permanently deployed as your team's ongoing AI helper. Separate engagement, separate conversation — but usually the right next step.