Quick Assessment: Where Is Your Team?
Answer 5 questions. Takes 60 seconds. No data collected.
1. When someone on your team needs to summarise a long document, they…
2. How does your team handle repetitive admin (data entry, status updates, report formatting)?
3. If a manager needs to make a decision using team data (performance, output, attendance), they…
4. How many people on your team could build a simple automated workflow (e.g., auto-send a report, route an approval)?
5. When a new AI tool launches (like Gemini in Google Workspace or Copilot in Microsoft 365), your team…
The 7 Stages of AI Readiness
Every team sits somewhere on this scale. Most are at Stage 1 or 2. The organisations pulling ahead are the ones that have identified where they are and invested in moving up — not with one-off training days, but with structured programmes that build real capability over time.
Googlers
Your team searches Google for answers, reads articles, watches YouTube tutorials. AI isn’t part of how they work. They might have heard of ChatGPT but haven’t used it for anything meaningful.
Prompters
A few people use ChatGPT, Gemini, or Copilot occasionally — usually for writing emails or brainstorming. But it’s sporadic, individual, and nothing sticks. There’s no process, no consistency, no shared practice.
Project Builders
People are starting to use AI for real work — drafting documents, analysing data, creating presentations. But it’s still siloed to individuals. There’s no team-wide approach and no one’s connecting AI to the tools where data actually lives.
Connected Workers
AI is plugged into real tools. Gemini summarises emails in Gmail. Copilot generates charts in Excel. Data flows between systems without manual copy-pasting. The team is starting to save genuine time.
Builders
Team members are building things — custom apps in AppSheet or Power Apps, dashboards that update themselves, automated approval workflows. They’re solving real problems without waiting for IT.
Automators
Recurring work runs itself. AI handles the first draft, routes the approval, sends the notification, generates the report. People spend their time on judgment calls, exceptions, and improvements — not routine processing.
AI-Native Teams
AI is woven into the operating model. Every new process starts with “what can AI handle?” The team runs a deliberate stack of AI tools, each chosen for a specific purpose. People are more productive, more data-literate, and more adaptable than teams that haven’t made this shift.
Which Programme Fits Which Stage?
Every TESS Group programme maps to a specific jump on the readiness scale. Here’s where each one fits:
AI & Automation L4
The big leap. Takes practitioners from ad-hoc prompting to building real automations. Available in Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace editions. 15 months, £18,000 levy-funded.
Programme details →Data-Driven Team Leader L3
For operational leaders. Turns gut-feel managers into data-informed decision makers. Dashboards, Power BI, evidence-based leadership. 15 months, £13,000 levy-funded.
Programme details →AI for Operations Leaders L4
For managers leading AI-enabled teams. Strategic AI literacy, governance, and operational AI deployment. Levy-funded.
Programme details →AI Awareness Workshops
90-minute to half-day sessions. Hands-on, practical, using your team’s real work. The quickest way to move from “I’ve heard of AI” to “I just used it.”
Book a workshop →Why Most Teams Get Stuck at Stage 2
Stage 2 is the most crowded part of the scale. Almost every organisation has a few people experimenting with AI. The problem is that experimentation without structure doesn’t compound. Here’s why teams stall:
- No shared practice: One person figures something out, but there’s no mechanism to share it. The knowledge lives in their head and disappears when they’re busy.
- No connection to real tools: People prompt AI in a browser tab, then go back to Google Sheets and do the work manually. The AI output doesn’t plug into anything.
- No management support: Leaders haven’t been trained in what’s possible. They can’t set expectations, allocate time, or recognise AI skills because they don’t have them.
- No formal learning: YouTube tutorials and LinkedIn posts get people to Stage 2. Getting to Stage 3 and beyond requires structured, hands-on training with accountability and real projects.
This is exactly why apprenticeship programmes work for AI skills. They’re not a course you attend and forget — they’re 15 months of structured learning applied to your actual job, with qualifications at the end that prove the capability is real.
Find Out Where Your Team Sits
Take the quick assessment above, or book a discovery call and we’ll help you map your team’s AI readiness and recommend the right programme for each stage.
Book a Discovery CallFrequently Asked Questions
What is AI readiness?
AI readiness is how prepared your workforce is to use AI tools effectively in their daily roles. It goes beyond awareness — it covers whether people can prompt AI well, connect it to real workflows, build automations, and operate AI as part of how the team works. Most UK teams are at Stage 1 or 2: they know AI exists but aren’t using it consistently or productively.
How do I assess my team’s AI readiness?
Start by observing how your team actually works. Are they still Googling questions AI could answer? Are they copy-pasting between tools that could be connected? Are any automations running? The 7-stage scale above gives you a framework to benchmark against. The interactive assessment at the top of this page gives you a quick starting point.
Can AI readiness be funded through the apprenticeship levy?
Yes. The AI & Automation L4 is fully funded at £18,000 through the Growth & Skills Levy for levy-paying employers. SMEs can access government co-investment or full funding. The Data-Driven Team Leader L3 is funded at £13,000. These programmes take teams from the lower stages to Stages 5–6 over 15 months, with accredited qualifications included.
What if my team is at different stages?
That’s normal. Most organisations have a mix — a few early adopters at Stage 4–5, a majority at Stage 1–2, and managers who need data skills to lead AI-ready teams. The right approach is matching programmes to where people are: workshops for awareness, the AI & Automation L4 for practitioners, and the Data-Driven Team Leader L3 for operational leaders.
How long does it take to move up the AI readiness scale?
A focused workshop can move someone from Stage 1 to Stage 2 in a day. The AI & Automation L4 apprenticeship typically moves people from Stage 2–3 to Stage 5–6 over 15 months. Moving an entire team takes longer because it requires culture change, not just individual skills. But the apprenticeship model — learning while working — accelerates this because skills are applied immediately.