AI in professional services (PS) is often sold as a path to efficiency. But what’s missing in that conversation is the human cost.
At Propel 2025, Brian Hodges, President and Co-Founder of nCloud Integrators, made the case for a different approach, one that focuses on protecting the people doing the work and restoring trust with clients. Brian shared how services leaders can tackle persistent PS challenges with AI and automation, without burning out their teams or breaking trust with clients.
Here are the key takeaways from the session.
Behind every services dashboard are real people, individuals trusting their leaders with their careers and well-being. AI and automation aren’t just tools to improve margins. They’re levers to relieve the pressure on teams who’ve been stretched thin for too long. Professional services, customer success, and support functions are all feeling the heat.
However, the opportunity is clear: eliminate repetitive work, reduce context-switching, and create space for judgment-driven tasks. Start by identifying where teams feel stuck. That’s where automation makes the most impact, on delivery and morale.
Too many organizations ignore employee experience during automation rollouts. That needs to shift. A future-ready PS function uses AI not just to optimize delivery, but to protect and empower its people.
Today’s service organizations can pull in data from CRM, CS, support, and delivery systems to flag risks, standardize handoffs, and automate routine work. AI adds forecasting, nudges, and intelligent summaries, helping teams work smarter, not just harder.
But the success of these tools hinges on one thing: trust.
The key is to shift the message: AI isn’t about replacement. It’s about relief.
Teams that see sustained success will be the ones that automate the grunt work, strip away low-value clicks, and give teams time to coach, grow, and focus on outcomes. They build space for upskilling, product knowledge, and better customer conversations.
As leaders, you need to show, not tell, that the point of AI is better work, not just more of it.
The reality in most services organizations is this: sales hands off projects with incomplete or buried information, status reports are overly optimistic, sentiment is anecdotal, and client accountability is hit-or-miss.
The good news is that none of these are hard problems to solve if leaders start by applying AI and automation in the right places.
Here are a few use cases that reflect what nCloud and its customers are actively doing:
Sales data sits buried in tools like Salesforce, while business outcomes aren’t clearly defined. As a result, PS teams start engagements without context, wasting time revalidating assumptions.
A smarter approach helps PS teams:
This way, consultants start on Day 1 with context: key outcomes, stakeholder intent, and decision drivers so they can ramp up faster, reduce the chances of misalignment, and minimize rework.
One of the trickiest PS challenges is the so-called watermelon project, green on the outside, red at the core. Everything looks fine in reports, but buried in Slack threads and sugar-coated updates are early signs of trouble. By the time the real risks surface, it’s often too late to course-correct.
With the right application of AI and automation, PS teams can:
Too often, clients miss deadlines simply because they lack clarity on what’s needed or when. Project managers and consultants scramble last minute.
To prevent this, make sure your PS team uses AI and automation to:
nCloud Integrators applies a practical framework that helps leaders and teams fix what matters. It helps leaders and teams:
The EASE framework provides PS teams a repeatable, scalable, and empathetic approach to AI adoption across the organization.
Check out the rest of our Propel25 recaps here for more insights from the industry’s best.