THE AI INTERVIEW
From predictive maintenance to autonomous agents, the promise of the technology often outpaces its practical application when it comes to AI. For Philippe Rambach, Chief Artificial Intelligence Officer at Schneider Electric, the challenge is not just implementing the latest algorithms across more than 160 factories, 140 countries and many thousands of customers but ensuring those algorithms serve a purpose that moves the bottom line.
In a sector where a single mistake can disrupt a global supply chain or compromise a national electrical grid, the transition from experimental pilots to industrial scaling requires a blend of rigorous engineering and cultural evolution. At Schneider Electric, this journey is defined by a“ business-first” mantra that prioritises real-world utility over the call of new tech.
The philosophy of scaling: Business value over technology The central pillar of Schneider Electric’ s AI strategy is a refusal to be led by the technology itself. While many firms fall into the trap of“ technology tourism”, trialling thousands of pilots to see what sticks, Philippe takes a more disciplined approach. In the high-stakes world of energy management and industrial automation, there is little room for vanity projects.
“ The key is to start from the business value, the business case, he explains.“ Never start from technology. We try to stay away from‘ let’ s try all these technologies; let’ s do thousands of pilots and let’ s see if one is good’. We take it the other way around. We start from‘ this is something we want to impact; can AI help?’ If AI can help, then we start a process and a development of a use case to deliver the value.”
This philosophy is baked into a structured process of ideation, exploration and incubation. Every use case must pass through gate reviews that scrutinise two factors: technical feasibility and business
4 se. com