AI is new—but the playbook isn’t: Lessons from the last seismic shift in sales

Learn from the ecommerce boom and discover how AI is transforming sales teams, reshaping go-to-market strategies, and driving smarter, faster performance across industries.
April 16, 2025
5
min read
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Every now and then, a wave of disruption comes along that doesn’t just change how business gets done—it redefines the competitive landscape entirely. For sales organizations today, that wave is artificial intelligence.

AI is already transforming the way customers discover, evaluate, and engage with brands. It’s influencing how sellers interact with buyers, how leaders allocate resources, and how companies build their go-to-market (GTM) strategies.

And yet—despite its accelerating impact—many organizations are reacting like it’s a curiosity. A useful new tool. Something to keep an eye on. But we’ve been here before.

This isn’t a brand-new story. It’s a sequel.

In the early 2000s, eCommerce entered the scene. Most brands treated it like an experiment—a digital side hustle to support their brick-and-mortar core. The assumptions were:

  • Customers will mostly still shop in-store.
  • Online sales might grow, but not enough to upend our model.
  • There’s time.

And then? Amazon scaled. Shopify democratized. Mobile-first experiences changed consumer expectations almost overnight. Suddenly, the store wasn’t the primary channel—the screen was. Brands that treated eCommerce as “just a tool” didn’t just lose market share. Some lost relevance entirely.

We’re seeing the same signals today with AI.

Like eCommerce in its early days, AI is being mischaracterized as incremental. Leaders are thinking in point solutions—an AI assistant here, a smarter dashboard there—when the shift is system-wide.

The danger is in treating AI like a feature, when in reality, it’s a forcing function. It’s not just about what you sell—it’s about how your entire commercial engine works.

Sales teams are already at the center of the shift

Sales organizations sit on the front lines of this transformation. They’re already seeing how AI can:

  • Accelerate pipeline generation
  • Sharpen targeting and forecasting
  • Personalize engagement at scale

But while many are experimenting, few are reorganizing their GTM strategies around the new reality.

This is where forward-thinking leaders are getting ahead:

  • They’re moving from enablement to reinvention.
  • They’re embedding AI not as a feature, but as a capability that reshapes how teams compete and grow.

The real impact comes from connection, not addition

We’re seeing this play out in real time. The most effective sales transformations are happening not through standalone capability building, but through integrated change. As Jason Davis puts it, “The most valuable transformations aren’t about adding new capabilities in isolation—they happen when capability building is tied directly to go-to-market methodology and initiative execution.”

Said another way: It’s not about piling on new technologies—it’s about weaving AI into the core of how your commercial engine operates. When AI is embedded into the systems and processes that already drive performance—target setting, customer engagement, deal qualification, seller coaching—it becomes a force multiplier. It enables organizations to execute smarter, faster, and more consistently across the board.

Start small, learn fast, move forward

You don’t need to overhaul everything at once.

Just like the eCommerce shift didn’t happen in a quarter, becoming an AI-enabled sales organization is a journey. But it’s one that starts with momentum.

Teams that thrived during the last disruption didn’t wait for perfect clarity:

  • They ran pilots.
  • They iterated fast.
  • They learned faster.

That same mindset applies today. Start by identifying friction points in your GTM system:

  • Where could AI create lift?
  • Where can you test, learn, and adapt?

Momentum matters more than perfection. The speed at which you learn and change will be a critical differentiator.

The cost of inaction is real

As AI becomes the new baseline for high-performance sales organizations, the cost of doing nothing will compound quickly. Teams that delay risk being left behind—not just by their competitors, but by their customers, whose expectations are already shifting.

Buyers are already experiencing what AI can deliver: greater personalization, faster responsiveness, and more intelligent solutions. Organizations that don’t evolve in parallel will increasingly feel out of step with the market.

Sales leaders who recognize this shift early—and who take deliberate steps to reimagine their GTM strategies through an AI lens—will stay competitive, and they’ll help define what great looks like in the next era of commercial excellence.

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November 5, 2025
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From top-down to judgment all around: The AI imperative for organizations

Discover why AI makes human judgment the new competitive edge and how organizations can develop leaders ready to out-judge, not out-think, AI.

Each business revolution has reshaped not only how businesses operate, but how they organize themselves and empower their people. From the industrial age to the information era, and now into the age of artificial intelligence, technology has always brought with it a reconfiguration of authority, capability, and judgment.

In the 19th century, industrialization centralized work and knowledge. The factory system required hierarchical structures where strategy, information, and decision-making were concentrated at the top. Managers at the apex made tradeoffs for the greater good of the enterprise because they were the only ones with access to the full picture.

Then came the information economy. With it came the distribution of information and a need for more agile, team-based structures. Cross-functional collaboration and customer proximity became competitive necessities. Organizations flattened, experimented with matrix models, and pushed decision-making closer to where problems were being solved. What had once been the purview of a select few, judgment, strategic tradeoffs, and insight became expected competencies for managers and team leads across the enterprise.

Now, AI is changing the game again. But this time, it’s not just about access to data. It’s about access to intelligence.

Generative AI democratizes access not only to information, but to intelligent output. That shifts the burden for humans from producing insights to evaluating them. Judgment, which was long the domain of a few executives, must now become a baseline competency for the many across the organization.

But here’s the paradox: while AI extends our capacity for intelligence, discernment, the human ability to weigh context, values, and consequence, is still best left in the hands of human leaders. As organizations begin to automate early-career work, they may inadvertently erase the very pathways and opportunities by which judgment was built.

Why judgment matters more than ever

Deloitte’s 2023 Human Capital Trends survey found that 85% of leaders believe independent decision-making is more important than ever, but only 26% say they’re ready to support it. That shortfall threatens to neutralize the very productivity gains AI promises.

If employees can’t question, challenge, or contextualize AI’s output, then intelligent tools become dangerous shortcuts. The organization stalls, not from a lack of answers, but from a lack of sense-making.

What organizations must do

To stay competitive, organizations must shift from simply adopting AI to designing AI-aware ways of working:

  • Build new learning paths for judgment development. As AI replaces easily systematized tasks, companies must replace lost learning experiences with mentorship, simulations, and intentional development planning.
  • Design workflows that require human input. Treat AI as a co-pilot, not an autopilot. Embed review checkpoints and tradeoff discussions. Just as innovation processes have stage gates, so should AI analyses.
  • Make judgment measurable. Assess and develop decision-making under ambiguity from entry-level roles onward. Research shows the best learning strategy for this is high-fidelity simulations.
  • Start earlier. Leadership development must begin far earlier in career paths, because judgment, not just knowledge, is the new differentiator.

What’s emerging is not just a flatter hierarchy, but a more distributed sense of judgment responsibility. To thrive, organizations must prepare their people not to outthink AI, but to out-judge it.

Blog Posts
May 5, 2025
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BTS acquires Nexo to strengthen its position in Brazil and Latin America

BTS has agreed to acquire Nexo Pesquisa e Consultoria Ltda., Nexo, a boutique consulting firm headquartered in São Paulo, Brazil.

P R E S S R E L E A S E
Stockholm, May 5, 2025

STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN – BTS Group AB (publ), a leading global consultancy specializing in strategy execution, change, and people development, has agreed to acquire Nexo Pesquisa e Consultoria Ltda., Nexo, a boutique consulting firm headquartered in São Paulo, Brazil.

Nexo has been growing continuously since it was founded in 2017. With revenues of approximately 12 million Brazilian Reales (approx. 2.1 million USD) in 2024, and a highly capable team of 21 members, Nexo has built a strong reputation for delivering transformative projects in strategy, innovation, leadership, and culture.

Nexo collaborates with a great portfolio of clients across sectors such as financial services, consumer goods, and technology, assisting both local and global companies in navigating uncertainty, unlocking creativity, and activating strategy through people. Their work encompasses culture transformation, leadership development, employer value proposition, innovation culture, and vision alignment – supported by proprietary methodologies and frameworks.

BTS currently operates in Brazil servicing both local and multinational clients with a team of 13 employees. By acquiring Nexo, BTS not only increases the Group’s footprint in Brazil but also adds significant capabilities in culture and transformation services. Nexo’s client base has limited overlap with BTS, creating strong growth potential and synergy opportunities.

“Nexo is known for helping leaders and organizations tackle some of the most complex, human-centered challenges with creativity, empathy, and strategic clarity and the Nexo team is loved by their clients,” says Philios Andreou, Deputy CEO of BTS Group and President of the Other Markets Unit. “Their products and services complement and elevate our existing offerings, especially in culture transformation, and we are thrilled to welcome the Nexo team to BTS.”

“We’re excited to join BTS. We’ve long admired BTS’s approach and unique portfolio to support large organizations and leaders in connecting strategy with culture across the organization,” says Andreas Auerbach, co founder of Nexo. “Becoming part of BTS, allows us to scale our impact and bring more value to our clients while staying true to our values and culture,” adds Mariana Lage Andrade, co-founder of Nexo.

Upon completion of the transaction, Nexo’s business and organization will merge with BTS Brazil. Nexo’s founders will assume senior management roles in the joint operation.

The acquisition includes a limited initial cash consideration. Additional purchase price considerations will be paid between 2026 and 2028, provided Nexo meets specific performance targets. A limited portion of any such additional purchase price considerations will be paid in newly issued BTS shares. The transaction is effective immediately.

BTS’s acquisition strategy continues to focus on broadening our service portfolio, expanding our geographic reach, and enhancing our capabilities to support future organic growth in a fragmented market.

For more information, please contact:
Philios Andreou
Deputy CEO
BTS Group AB
philios.andreou@bts.com

Michael Wallin
Head of investor relations
BTS Group AB
michael.wallin@bts.com
+46-8-587 070 02
+46-708-78 80 19

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October 2, 2025
5
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High-performing teaming

How to design modern sales kickoffs that align teams, shift behavior, and drive impact through in-person, geo-specific, and hybrid formats.

Work today is too complex for individuals to succeed in isolation. Almost every critical decision, innovation, or transformation depends on teams working effectively together. Leaders rely on their teams to deliver results. Teams, in turn, rely on their leaders to create the conditions where performance is possible. This exchange, what leaders need from their teams, and what teams need from their leaders, sits at the heart of what we call teaming.

When teaming is strong, leaders get what they need from their teams [creativity, resilience, execution] and teams get what they need from leaders [direction, support, and the conditions to thrive]. It’s how strategy becomes action, how uncertainty becomes opportunity, and how businesses stay competitive in a fast-changing world.