Generative AI | Competivation
AI as a tool for strategic management

AI as a tool for strategic management

Artificial intelligence (AI) is currently developing into a powerful tool for strategic management that accelerates, strengthens and changes learning processes. This applies to the corporate level as well as to the level of functional areas and business processes. Pioneering companies are using knowledge-specific AI in the various phases of strategic processes and achieving competitive advantages with innovative, AI-based business models. Generative AI has the character of a wake-up call.

 

In our series of blog posts on artificial intelligence, this article deals with the role of AI in strategic management. In it, I explain the increasing importance of AI in strategy processes.

 

Generative AI as a wake-up call

The use of artificial intelligence in strategic management is not new. Since the turn of the millennium, US digital companies such as Amazon have been using AI-based personalization as part of their innovative business models.1 Surprisingly, many users of these business models are not aware of the contribution of AI.

In our book The Internet of Things and Artificial Intelligence as Game Changers, published in 2020, we described the strategy process for new IoT- and AI-based business models2 and discussed relevant business model patterns.3 At that time, however, interest in the topic was still limited in Germany.

The real wake-up call that shook the general public awake came in November 2022, when OpenAI released its ChatGPT dialog program. This action triggered a hype around generative AI and large language models, which was followed by a certain disillusionment.4

Many companies are now asking themselves what role artificial intelligence can play in their strategy processes.

 

AI-supported strategy processes at corporate level

A study by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) concludes that artificial intelligence accelerates and strengthens learning processes.5 Such augmented learning builds on existing learning capabilities. An important field of application are the various phases of innovative strategy processes that help companies to gain a new form of competitive advantage.

Lernprozess Innovationsstrategie

It starts with an AI audit to analyze the company’s initial strategic situation and its use of AI. This is followed by AI-supported strategic foresight, which enables faster and more efficient early detection. Knowledge-based AI is also a means of realigning business models. Another phase is the design of an AI-oriented stakeholder ecosystem. When selecting partners, it is important to find the right balance between cooperation and competition.

Innovative AI platform architectures form the basis for relevant applications, and companies generally need partners to implement them. Strategies are implemented with the help of agile, AI-supported performance management. This involves close coordination between the corporate level and the level of connected business processes.

Strategic learning loops, which take the form of rapid iterations, play a decisive role in agile strategy processes. This turns the analysis of the initial strategic situation into a dynamic process.

 

AI audit to analyze the initial strategic situation

A study by the German Economic Institute (IW) concludes that AI could contribute 330 billion euros to gross value added nationwide. One in five companies already uses AI. However, most applications are rather selective, e.g. in the form of chatbots for customer inquiries. Surprisingly, 66% of companies say that AI is not relevant to their business model. 36 percent consider integration into existing systems to be difficult. 47% complain about the lack of employee expertise. NRW Minister President Hendrik Wüst nevertheless believes that AI could be the driving force behind an economic upturn.6

To achieve this goal, companies should carry out an AI audit and use a SWOT analysis, for example, to gain an overview of their initial strategic situation.7 Interestingly, results of such an analysis of strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats are similar. One strength of companies is that they have a lot of specific knowledge that has the potential to be enhanced by AI. This is often offset by weaknesses in the systematic anchoring of AI in strategies and processes. The potential of AI lies both in increasing productivity and in innovation benefits through new products, services and business models. On the other hand, there are many threats from competitors, foreign stakeholder ecosystems and misuse of the power inherent in artificial intelligence.8

Lernprozess Innovationsstrategie

On this basis, the next step is to prepare even better for future developments with the help of AI-supported strategic foresight.

 

AI-supported strategic foresight

The term strategic foresight, coined in the 1980s, has a long history, during which methods such as scenario analysis, which are still widely used today, were developed. The Gamechanger Radar developed by us makes it possible to prepare for far-reaching changes.9 With AI-supported strategic foresight, pioneering companies are now writing a new chapter in foresight. This chapter assumes a change in the way people search for information on the internet.

For example, Google has developed the new search function „Overview with AI“, which provides summarized texts on topics. An example is shown in the following illustration. The topic I entered is: „Applying Complexity Theory in Management“. The answer that Google provides is surprisingly good. It describes the paradigm shift in strategic management that has taken place in recent decades more comprehensively and better than many individual publications on this topic.

Lernprozess Innovationsstrategie

Foresight users will learn to improve their prompting capabilities relatively quickly. In addition, AI-supported foresight platforms are currently emerging that simplify and accelerate the early recognition of new trends, which usually take the form of weak signals.

Of course, this development also poses a threat to Google’s traditional search engine business, which is linked to advertising. The start-up Perplexity, for example, is trying to take users away from Google with its user-friendly „answer engine“. It remains to be seen what effect this will have on the market leader’s profit driver10

Reasoning AI enables advantages for complex tasks such as strategic foresight. It is now offered by some AI developers. In reasoning, the AI breaks down possible queries into sub-problems and processes them step by step. Such slower thinking costs more computing power and electricity. Developers call the „reasoning“ of AI a chain of thought (CoT). Reasoning models achieve this through an additional training step that uses reinforcement learning to train detailed reasoning. Similar to an experienced employee, reasoning models analyze complex information step by step. To do this, they need a single precise prompt and a lot of context. However, the application of reasoning AI in strategic foresight is still at the experimental stage.11

 

AI-based realignment of business models

Innovative business models for AI-based robotics are currently emerging. This represents an opportunity for Europe. Stanford professor and great „godmother of AI“ Fei-Fei Li has founded the start-up World Labs, which develops AI models for the spatial intelligence of robots that support machines. Google subsidiary DeepMind and digital giant Nvidia are also working on partner networks for AI-based human-like robots. Many of the partners come from Europe. In addition to well-known robotics companies, start-ups such as Anybotics (Switzerland) and Agile Robots, Neura Robotics and Quantum Systems from Germany are emerging here, although they do not have as much funding as their competitors from the USA (e.g. Figure AI and Covariant). For Europe, it is important to seize the opportunities arising from the combination of in-depth industry-specific knowledge and innovative AI models as quickly as possible.12

Two dimensions are relevant for an AI-based realignment of business models. These dimensions are productivity orientation and innovation orientation. Most companies start with an AI-based increase in productivity and use AI in routine processes to reduce personnel costs. In addition, many fields of application for AI-based innovations have now emerged. When both dimensions come together, we speak of AI-based ambidexterity. The term ambidexterity originally refers to the ability to use both hands in sport. Applied to management, ambidextrous leadership describes leadership that strikes a good balance between innovation and productivity.13

Lernprozess Innovationsstrategie

The specific applications of these two dimensions in industries and companies result in a wide variety of AI-based ambidexterity. The new business models are embedded in AI-oriented stakeholder ecosystems.

 

AI-oriented stakeholder ecosystems

German and European policymakers are planning to boost the performance of their AI ecosystem. In view of the changing geopolitical situation, the coalition agreement of the new German government provides for a strengthening of digital sovereignty. The digital policy of the European Union (EU) aims in the same direction. Five gigantic data centers are planned in order to catch up in the field of artificial intelligence. The Jülich and Stuttgart sites are candidates for such a gigafactory in Germany. When it comes to AI regulation, the EU wants to focus more on competitiveness and reduce bureaucracy. An EU action plan has been drafted to this end. It remains to be seen whether these measures will be enough to reduce dependence on the large cloud providers (hyperscalers) from the USA.14

There are also two dimensions to consider when designing a company’s AI-oriented stakeholder ecosystem.15 One dimension is the dependence on powerful AI providers. In order to reduce this dependency, the second dimension for companies is improving their own skills in the development and application of artificial intelligence. In the hype phase of basic AI models, dependence on US providers has increased. The opportunity for Europe now lies primarily in knowledge-specific AI models for various applications. Hybrid AI ecosystems are emerging by connecting these two dimensions. Such connectivity requires specific skills.

Lernprozess Innovationsstrategie

In view of the geopolitical uncertainties, companies are faced with the difficult task of finding the right partners when designing their AI ecosystem. The transitions between cooperation and competition are fluid. The term coopetition describes such a situation.16 However, the theoretical basis for a combination of cooperation and competition is still lacking in AI ecosystems. An important field of application is the selection and in-house development of innovative AI platform architectures.

 

Innovative AI platform architectures

The chip manufacturer AMD and the Finnish start-up Silo AI, which belongs to AMD, are working together with the companies of the Swedish Wallenberg Group. The Nvidia competitor AMD has announced a partnership with 38 companies. These include AstraZeneca, Scania, Saab, Ericsson and IKEA. The collaboration is coordinated by the Wallenberg innovation network Combient. The aim is to scale company-specific AI models. While OpenAI trains its AI models on Nvidia chips, Silo AI uses chips from AMD. The role of Silo AI is to accelerate the deployment of AI models at companies that use AMD platforms. The infrastructure on which the work has begun plays an important role here, as a move is time-consuming. Silo AI uses multimodal AI agents, i.e. models that process images and audio files as well as speech.17

Established digital companies have been practising an organizational form with an IT platform at its center for some time now.18 With the increasing importance of artificial intelligence, this concept is becoming more and more relevant for established companies. Innovative AI platform architectures combine both the strategic and operational levels as well as centralized and decentralized organizational units. This enables all business processes and projects to have access to a common database. Due to their connecting role, AI platforms not only become a strategic building block, but also an important organizational design element. One question that is not easy to answer is how large the share of partners and the company’s own share should be in such an AI platform.

Lernprozess Innovationsstrategie

Innovative platform architectures also provide the infrastructure for AI-supported performance management.

 

AI-supported performance management

To answer the question of how artificial intelligence can improve performance management, it helps to take a look at the history of performance measurement. The Management by Objectives (MbO) developed by Peter Drucker and the goal-setting theory developed by organizational psychologist Edwin Locke provide important conceptual foundations. Back in the 1980s, Intel developed the agile Objectives and Key Results (OKR) method, which the venture capitalist Kleiner Perkins used at Google, for example.19 In Germany, the Balanced Scorecard method, which emerged from a best practice study by Robert Kaplan and David Norton, is much better known.20 An AI-supported performance management system designed by Kleiner Perkins and the start-up Betterworks now aims to better connect strategy and motivation.

Lernprozess Innovationsstrategie

Although artificial intelligence is one of the top management issues for 2025, many companies neither formulate specific AI targets nor measure the results. A global BCG study, in which 1,800 managers were surveyed, found that only 24% of companies track their operational and financial AI targets. AI-supported performance management faces three challenges. These challenges are:21

  1. Do not stall early trials
  2. define appropriate key results for the success of an individual measure and, in addition
  3. capture the longer-term effects resulting from the interaction of various measures.

The agile OKR method provides a conceptual basis for this, but requires adaptation. OKR pioneer Kleiner Perkins is one of the investors in performance management software provider Betterworks. The vision of the Palo Alto-based company, which was founded in 2013, is to further develop traditional performance management. AI plays an important role here as a co-pilot. Managers can thus invest time saved on routine tasks in better harmonization of strategic and operational projects. Important use cases are:22

  • Alignment of ambitious corporate goals and personal goals
  • data-based, motivating feedback and
  • the support of communication and learning processes.

The intended benefit, which contributes to the overall success, is

  • a reduction in bias, more fairness and objectivity
  • increased productivity and
  • better personal relationships.

This brings performance management one step closer to the motivational concept already pursued by goal-setting theory.

With the increasing importance of artificial intelligence in strategic management, geopolitical expertise in working with stakeholders is becoming ever more important alongside practical skills in using AI as a tool. One basis for this is a strong future narrative.

 

A strong future narrative as a basis

In our 2020 book on the gamechanging potential of artificial intelligence, we took a critical look at European and German digital policy.23 The new German government now faces the task of developing a strong future narrative that connects various policy areas.24 One approach to such a much-needed grand narrative is the application of trustworthy AI both to increase productivity and to solve the innovation and environmental problems of organizations. At the heart of this is the new form of ambidexterity outlined earlier.

Lernprozess Innovationsstrategie

Traditional ambidexterity strives for a balance between tapping innovation potential (exploration) and utilization of productivity (exploitation). With the help of AI, which should be trustworthy, it is now possible to simultaneously

  • reduce labor costs by increasing productivity, counter the shortage of skilled workers25 and
  • to make greater use of qualified personnel for the digital and ecological realignment of organizations26

In view of the changed geopolitical situation, there is a window of opportunity for AI made in Europe, which the „old continent“ should use to strive for global market leadership in the necessary sustainability innovations.27 Due to the large number of crises to be overcome, this initially requires resilience-oriented strategic management.28

 

Conclusion

  • Strategy processes become more efficient through the use of artificial intelligence
  • Knowledge-specific AI supports strategic foresight, the realignment of business models, the design of stakeholder ecosystems, innovative platform architectures and performance management
  • Pioneering companies are working on AI-based ambidextry
  • In view of the geopolitical challenges, choosing the right partners is crucial.

 

Literature

[1] Servatius, H.G., Competitive advantages with knowledge-specific AI. In: Competivation Blog, 11.02.2025

[2] Kaufmann, T., Servatius, H.G., Das Internet der Dinge und Künstliche Intelligenz als Game Changer – Wege zu einem Management 4.0 und einer digitalen Architektur, SpringerVieweg 2020, p. 56ff.

[3] Kaufmann, Servatius, op. cit. p. 34ff.

[4] Servatius, H.G., Development of AI technologies. In: Competivation Blog, 19.02.2025

[5] Alavi, M., Westerman, G., How GenAI Will Transform Knowledge Work. In: Harvard Business Review, November 7, 2023

[6] Höning, A., Kowalewski, R., Every fifth company in NRW uses AI. In: Rheinische Post, November 13, 2025, p. 1

[7] Servatius, H.G., Auditing the innovation system of a company. In: Competivation Blog, 19.03.2015

[8] Suleyman, M., Bhaskar, M., The Coming Wave – Technology, Power and the Twenty-First Century’s Greatest Dilemma, Crown 2013

[9] Servatius, H.G., Strategic foresight with a game changer radar. In: Competivation Blog, 27.01.2021

[10] Alvares de Souza Soares, P., Geldmaschine Google – Wie lange noch? In: Handelsblatt, April 25/26/27, 2025, p. 26-27

[11] Knees, L., Why users pay more for slow AI. In: Handelsblatt, March 31, 2025, pp. 24-25

[12] Holtermann, F., Schimroszik, N., The robots are coming! In: Handelsblatt, January 3/4/5, 2025, pp. 44-48

[13] O’Reilley, C., Tushman, M., Lead and Disrupt – How to Solve the Innovator’s Dilemma, Stanford Business Books 2016

[14] Bomke, L., et al, Europe wants to build its own AI factories. In: Handelsblatt, April 9, 2025, p. 6-7

[15] Servatius, H.G., Designing innovative stakeholder ecosystems. In: Competivation Blog, 10.01.2023

[16] Brandenburger, A.M., Nalebuff, B.J., Co-Opetition – A Revolutionary Mindset That Combines Competition and Co-Operation, Bantam 1996

[17] Holzki, L., AMD enters into partnership with the industry. In: Handelsblatt, January 30, 2025, p. 24

[18] Servatius, H.G., The resource platform with agile teams as a new organizational form. In: Competivation Blog, 12.01.2021

[19] Doerr, J., Measure What Matters – How Google, Bono and the Gates Foundation Rock the World with OKRs, Portfolio/Penguin 2018

[20] Kaplan, R.S., Norton, D.P., Balanced Scorecard – Translating Strategy into Action, Harvard Business School Press 1996

[21] Bomke, L., Höppner, A., Only a few companies measure their AI initiatives. In: Handelsblatt, January 16, 2025, p. 21

[22] Gouldsberry, M., The Pivotal Role of AI in Performance Management, January 11, 2025

[23] Kaufmann, Servatius, op. cit. p. 203ff.

[24] Servatius, H.G., On the way to a new economic policy narrative. In: Competivation Blog, 16.05.2022

[25] Servatius, H.G., Process-oriented AI to increase productivity. In: Competivation Blog, 12.03.2025

[26] Servatius, H.G., AI and the future of management education. In: Competivation Blog, 09.04.2025

[27] Servatius, H.G., Sustainability-oriented strategic management. In: Competivation Blog, 15.08.2024

[28] Servatius, H.G., Resilience-oriented strategic management. In: Competivation Blog, 15.03.2024

Development of AI technologies

Development of AI technologies

There is a large discrepancy between the current importance of the topic of artificial intelligence and the AI expertise of most people. This widespread know-how gap ranges from students and teachers to managers and politicians. It therefore seems important to look at the development and current status of AI technologies, which were created almost 70 years ago, something that many people are unaware of.

This new blog post is the continuation of our series on competitive advantage with knowledge-based artificial intelligence. In it, I outline the roots of AI technologies and explain the hype and disillusionment with large language models.

 

Training offensive based on the AI Act

The European Union’s AI Act requires companies to provide their employees with practical know-how on how AI works and how it can be used, as well as the opportunities and limitations of the technology. This EU Regulation 2024/1689 came into force in Germany on February 2, 2025.1 Specific training modules may be necessary for individual user groups, such as IT, legal, HR and operational units, which must be tailored to the existing level of knowledge. Furthermore, it seems sensible to adapt the teaching of AI know-how to the respective situation of the company. One place to start is with knowledge of the development of artificial intelligence (AI) and its various technologies

 

From symbolic AI and neural networks to „AI winters“

Artificial intelligence has experienced a series of ups and downs in its long development history. In the computer sciences of the 1950s, two approaches emerged in the attempt to develop machines that mimic human intelligence:2

  • Symbolic AI is based on programmable rules and a systematic logic with the aim of representing knowledge and deriving conclusions. The aim is to represent a real-world problem programming symbols and their relationships.
  • Inspired by the networking of the brain, neural networks aim to simulate learning processes by using connections between artificial neurons. This method relies on data-driven machine learning to find patterns and correlations.

The Dartmouth summer research project initiated by scientists such as John McCarthy and Marvin Minsky in 1956, which focused on symbolic AI, is regarded as the birth of artificial intelligence. This forms the basis for expert systems that attempt to translate rules and decision-making chains into computer code . However, its advocates underestimated the complexity of the brain, which led to the first „AI winter“ in the 1970s.

The first neural network was designed by psychologist Frank Rosenblatt, who was not present at Dartmouth, in 1956. Inspired by Rosenblatt’s work, physiologist, cognitive psychologist and computer scientist Geoffrey Hinton developed a multilayer neural network and an algorithm at the University of Toronto in 1986 that enabled the system to learn from its calculation errors. This method of backpropagation led to a refinement of the answers. It was the breakthrough for neural networks. However, the computing power was not sufficient for large amounts of data and a second „AI winter“ occurred before the turn of the millennium.

 

Deep learning

An improvement in hardware was achieved with the super-fast chips of the graphics processing units (GPU), which the US semiconductor manufacturer Nvidia initially developed for video games and later used to train multi-layer neural networks. Improved methods of image recognition that used small errors to recognize patterns (Convolutional Neural Network CNN) were then decisive. In 2015, Hinton and his colleagues coined the term deep learning for deeper models with more neuron layers.

 

Transformer architecture

In 2013, important impulses for Natural Language Processing (NLP) came from a Google team that trained a neural network in such a way that the proximity of words within a space reflects their semantic relationship. The team taught its word embedding system (word2vec) to predict the missing word in a sentence. A further development published in 2017 was called the Google Transformer architecture. The basic principle is to find out which words are most important in a sentence (self-attention) and thus „transform“ a text into a summary.

In 2019, OpenAI published its GPT-2 model, which had been trained on 40 gigabytes (eight million websites) with 1.5 billion parameters and should therefore be able to predict the most likely next word in a sequence. GPT stands for Generative Pre-Trained Transformer. On November 30, 2022, OpenAI launched its chatbot ChatGPT to the public. Following a prompt, the chatbot produces longer texts from different fields of knowledge, but is prone to errors (hallucinates). Foundation models that form a training foundation for specific applications and are based on Internet content are known as large language models (LLMs).

This development of artificial intelligence is summarized in the following figure. AI is a generic term for various technologies that describes an extension of aspects of learning and intelligence by a machine.

Lernprozess Innovationsstrategie

With an AI that combines neural networks with the Monte Carlo Tree Research (MCTR) method, DeepMind, a company acquired by Google, has not only managed to defeat one of the world’s best players in the Asian board game Go since 2015, but also to predict the folding of 200 million proteins. This shows that an AI that works according to the principle of reinforcement learning both increases productivity and expands specific knowledge and the resulting skills. When generative AI (GenAI) is applied, this results in new perspectives for knowledge work in companies. With the help of knowledge-specific (domain-specific) GenAI, the European economy, with its high proportion of highly specialized companies, has new opportunities to differentiate itself from the competition.

 

Nobel Prizes for AI researchers

The 2024 Nobel Prizes in Physics went to John Hopfield and Geoffrey Hinton, who conduct research into machine learning and artificial neural networks. One half of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry went to Demis Hassabis and John Jumper, who work at Google subsidiary DeepMind, for their AI-based prediction of complex protein structures. This makes it clear that there are serious changes in technology and innovation management in the creation of new knowledge.

 

Hype and disillusionment with large language models

Large language models (LLMs) are currently going through a hype cycle. The technological trigger was the chatbot ChatGPT developed by Open AI in November 2022. Large language models based on the Transformer technology presented by Google researchers in 2017 had been around for some time. But ChatGPT reached the masses and had 100 million users after two months.

The peak of exaggerated expectations was demonstrated by a gigantic investment bubble in the race for AI supremacy by large digital companies and start-ups.

The valley of disappointment manifested itself in the unfulfilled management illusion that the high investments would also lead to profitable applications and the resulting stock market illusion.3

Lernprozess Innovationsstrategie

One possible path to enlightenment could come from cost-effective small language models with industry-, company- and process-specific applications.

Whether, when and how exactly a plateau in productivity will be reached with knowledge-based AI is not yet entirely clear. However, we assume that this will result in opportunities for the European economy. AI providers should exploit these opportunities together with users.

 

Advantages of small and specific AI models

Large language models strive to cover as many areas as possible and are primarily trained with data from the internet. This is not only time-, cost- and energy-intensive, but the marginal benefit of additional data decreases. For specialized tasks, the performance of large language models can even deteriorate over time.(4)

Small language models do not have these disadvantages. Their training is based on industry-, company- and process-specific data. The Berlin start-up Xayn, for example, specializes in law firms and legal departments. There are several approaches to training, e.g.

– a Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG): This involves the coupling of a large language model to internal databases
– Continuous pre-training in the form of domain-specific models and
– training of own models with complete control over the data used.

Start-ups from the USA, such as Databricks, offer their customers the joint development of company-specific AI models. The costs for training these customized models are significantly lower than those for training GPT-4, for example, which amount to almost 80 million dollars. The training is based on individual company data.5 One potential risk is becoming dependent on service providers. The alternative is therefore to empower your own employees. The basis for this is an AI human reource strategy for the company.

When it comes to industry-specific AI solutions, cooperation between established companies and start-ups can be successful.6 The Berlin start-up Linetweet, for example, focuses on AI tools for store management in the retail sector. Linetweet already won the optician chain Fielmann in 2019 with a tool for digital appointment scheduling. This tool was developed further together. Today, Store AI automatically adjusts the schedules in Fielmann stores based on company-specific data, thereby increasing store productivity. So far, Linetweet is wholly owned by the two founders. This example shows the potential of combining the industry-specific knowledge of established companies with the AI expertise of start-ups.

At present, many companies are still focusing on individual processes in their AI applications. The really big breakthrough of AI will probably only come with an integrated view of strategies and business processes.7 These are the topics of our next blog posts.

 

Conclusion

  • The basis for generative AI with large language models is formed by neural networks, the development of which began many decades ago
  • Nobel Prize-winning AI researchers have changed technology and innovation management
  • After the hype phase triggered by ChatGPT, a certain disillusionment is emerging in large language models
  • Knowledge-based AI has a number of advantages that European companies should explore.

 

Literature

[1] Obmann, C., What bosses and employees need to know about AI now. In: Handelsblatt, February 17, 2025, p. 32-33

[2] Meckel, M., Steinacker, L., Alles überall auf einmal – Wie Künstliche Intelligenz unsere Welt verändert und was wir dabei gewinnen können, Rowohlt 2024

[3] Holtermann, F., Holzki, L., de Souza Soares, A.P., The great crisis of meaning. In: Handelsblatt, August 9/10/11, 2024, pp. 46-51

[4] Bomke, L., Holzki, L., Which AI counts for the economy. In: Handelsblatt, September 23, 2024, p. 20-23

[5] Bomke, L., Kerkmann, C., Scheuer, S., Corporate AI becomes affordable. In: Handelsblatt, May 3 / 4 / 5, 2024, p. 30

[6] Bomke, L., Retailers reorganize their stores with AI. In: Handelsblatt, January 2, 2025, p. 32

[7] Servatius, H.G., Competitive advantages with a knowledge-specific AI. In: Competivation Blog, February 11, 2025

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