
This is a sobering reality in enterprise AI: despite the hype, 95% of in-house AI projects are failing. MIT’s State of AI in Business 2025 report makes it clear that while generative AI has transformative potential, most corporate efforts stall out well before delivering meaningful impact.
Executives may point to regulation, data quality, or immature technology, but the research suggests otherwise. The problem isn’t the models themselves—it’s implementation. And too many companies are treating AI like a shiny toy, not a serious business transformation.
Why In-House AI Projects Fail
So, why are so many companies falling into the 95%?
The Learning Gap – Generic tools like ChatGPT are good for individuals because of their flexibility. But they stall in the enterprise because they don’t integrate with workflows, don’t adapt to organizational processes, and lack the “stickiness” to drive change.
Resource Misallocation – The MIT report highlights that more than half of enterprise AI budgets are being spent on sales and marketing tools, even though the greatest ROI lies in back-office automation (eliminating outsourcing, cutting agency costs, streamlining operations) – more on this later.
DIY Mentality – Internal builds succeed only one-third as often as purchased solutions. Yet many firms still insist on going solo. It’s the corporate equivalent of assembling Ikea furniture without instructions—you might eventually get something resembling a table, but it’ll wobble every time you touch it.
Lack of Ownership – Successful AI adoption isn’t driven by central AI labs alone. It’s driven by empowering managers and frontline teams to embed tools into their daily work. Without that, the tech sits in a corner gathering dust.
And beyond these organizational barriers, there’s some very human factors:
· People assume AI is easier than it is.
· The novelty fades and teams get distracted or re-assigned.
· AI is too often seen as “cheap” or even “free,” it receives less serious attention than it should. The result is a graveyard of half-finished pilots and underwhelming outcomes.
· Structured failure – people don’t want to hear it, but failure is sometime deliberate. People fear AI and see an internal project as an easy way to prove it wrong!
The Psychology of the 95%
Here’s the kicker: while only 5% of in-house projects appear succeed (according to the MIT report), almost no company believes they’re in the failing majority. Statistically, of course, most of them are. But human nature kicks in, and no one wants to admit they’re part of the herd, lest they get “cut” from it!
This collective denial means organizations keep making the same mistakes: underestimating complexity, overestimating their capabilities, and clinging to the idea that “this time will be different.” It’s like watching 95% of drivers skid off the same icy corner and insisting, “We’ll be fine.”
In-House vs. Packaged: Why the Odds Are Stacked Against DIY
The second layer to this conversation is the difference between building AI in-house versus deploying purpose-built solutions. The MIT data already shows purchased solutions succeed twice as often as in-house builds, but the reasons go even deeper.
AI Is Not Just About the LLM – Tools like Shadow (blatant sales pitch!) for example, don’t just sit on top of GPT. They blend an LLM with procedural code, custom workflows, session memory, and domain-specific expertise. In Shadow’s case, that means sales strategy, behavioral psychology, objection handling, and real-world B2B sales scenarios. You can’t replicate that from scratch with a general-purpose model.
Security and Governance Are Already Solved – Enterprise AI requires airtight security: SOC2, GDPR, HIPAA compliance, SSO, access controls, and audit trails. Shadow, for example, is deployed in Microsoft Azure environments and uses enterprise-grade APIs where no customer data is retained. Building that level of governance from scratch is harder than people think, it’s expensive and risky.
Integration Matters – A packaged solution integrates with Outlook, Teams, Salesforce, or whatever stack your team uses. More importantly, the UX is designed for how sellers actually work—so adoption is far smoother. A homegrown chatbot might “exist,” but if no one uses it, you haven’t solved anything.
Time, Cost, and Risk – A proper in-house build isn’t weeks or months—it’s 6–12+ months of hard development time, requiring cross-functional teams of engineers, AI specialists, UX designers, and subject matter experts. Even then, the risk of missed edge cases and lack of adoption is high. In contrast, packaged solutions are live today, tested in real-world use, and refined through hundreds of iterations.
Depth of Functionality – Beyond text generation, packaged solutions often include scraping engines, enrichment, retrieval-augmented generation (RAG), structured usage tracking, and clean export options. Replicating that stack from scratch is like building a skyscraper because you think the office rent is too high.
The Harsh Truth
The dream of in-house AI is seductive: control, customization, bragging rights. But the reality is that most companies don’t have the talent, time, or resources to pull it off. And the numbers don’t lie: 95% of in-house AI projects are failing.
Yet because no one wants to admit they’re part of the 95%, companies keep wasting money, attention, and momentum. The paradox is brutal: the very confidence that drives firms to build in-house is the same overconfidence that ensures their failure.
In contrast, packaged solutions—especially those built with domain expertise and hardened through real-world use—offer a path out of the cycle. They’re not just tools; they’re accelerators, designed to integrate into workflows, safeguard data, and deliver measurable business outcomes quickly.
Unless your core business is developing AI SaaS platforms, building in-house is at best a distraction and at worst a slow, expensive failure. Or put more bluntly: why try to reinvent the wheel when someone’s already built a Formula 1 car?