Ten years ago, I started Liatrio on the belief that probably sounded naïve to a lot of people: that the largest, most complex organizations in the world could actually move fast. Those brilliant engineers weren't being held back by talent; they were being held back by the systems and processes built around them.
That belief hasn't changed. Not once.
What has changed is everything around us. The technology. The pace. The stakes. AI is moving faster than anything I've seen in my career, and the pressure on enterprise leaders to respond is unlike anything before it.
And yet, for Liatrio, it's all the same.
Today, I'm announcing that Liatrio is formally becoming an AI-first enablement company. Not because we reinvented ourselves — but because we never had to. We've always met enterprises at the frontier of what's next, equipped their teams to work in fundamentally new ways, and built the foundations that make change stick. We did it with DevOps. With cloud. With platform engineering. AI is just the most powerful, most urgent version of that work yet.
The question we hear most often isn't "should we adopt AI?" anymore. It's "why isn't it working?" That's the problem we're built to solve.
The enterprises that struggle with AI aren't struggling because the technology is too hard. They're struggling because they start with tools instead of teams. They layer AI on top of broken processes and wonder why nothing moves. It's the same mistake we've been helping organizations escape for a decade.
What makes our approach different is that AI isn't something we sell — it's something we live. AI is embedded into Liatrio's own operations, driving real business outcomes internally before it ever reaches a client. That practice translates directly into every engagement. Our clients don't get a theory. They get something we've already tested on ourselves.
We built three offering categories to meet organizations wherever they are in their AI journey:
When an engagement ends, the organization holds the keys. We don't create dependency — we build capability that outlasts our presence. That's always been the standard. It applies more now than ever.
I want to be honest about why this moment feels different to me personally.
I believe we are at an inflection point for humanity. AI, embraced fully and enabled properly — without letting process get in the way — can solve problems we've been stuck on for generations. I think about my kids and the world they'll inherit. The choices enterprises make right now will shape that world. That's not something I say lightly.
Everything around us is changing. We are staying the course.
Ten years in, that purpose has never felt more urgent. If you're tired of AI pilots that go nowhere, let's talk.

