Markus Bernhardt
Most enterprise AI programmes stall in the gap between vendor demos and operational reality. Leaders are asked to commit capital and reorganise teams before the evidence base for what actually works at scale exists. The pressure is to move fast on technology that rewrites how work gets done, without a credible read on which adoption patterns produce measurable outcomes.
Markus Bernhardt is an AI strategy researcher and advisor who helps senior leaders separate workable enterprise AI adoption from vendor noise, drawing on independent case-study research at Endeavor Intelligence.
Full Profile
Why organisations work with Markus Bernhardt
- He runs a continuous research programme, The Endeavor Report, built on client-led case studies of what is actually working in enterprise AI adoption, so the analysis a board hears is grounded in field evidence rather than vendor positioning.
- He translates AI capability into operating model decisions: where to redesign workflows, how to govern adoption, which workforce shifts to plan for. The conversation moves from technology curiosity to structural choice.
- He carries credibility on both sides of the table, having advised technology vendors on go-to-market and Fortune 100 and Fortune 500 leaders on transformation, which lets him read where vendor claims meet enterprise reality.
- His pragmatic stance is explicit: no silver bullet, no hype framing. Senior buyers get an honest read on adoption maturity, polarisation across the workforce, and the specific points where AI actually changes the cost or quality of work.
- Forbes Technology Council member and recurring contributor to Training Magazine, the Learning Guild and ATD, with two TD Magazine cover stories, giving the body of published thinking a paper trail leaders can verify.
Biography highlights
- Founder of Endeavor Intelligence, an independent AI strategy research and advisory firm
- Author of The Endeavor Report, a research programme on applied workforce solutions and enterprise AI adoption
- Co-creator of the TTE AI Strategy Framework with The Thinking Effect
- Former Chief Evangelist at Obrizum, a deep-tech adaptive learning company
- Forbes Technology Council member; contributor to Training Magazine, the Learning Guild, ATD and Coaching Magazine
- Doctorate in physics; two decades of work with Fortune 100 and Fortune 500 organisations
Biography
Enterprise AI adoption rarely fails on the technology. It fails on the operating model around it: who owns the workflow change, which capabilities the workforce needs next, what governance has to sit underneath. Markus Bernhardt’s work at Endeavor Intelligence is built around that gap.
The Endeavor Report, his flagship research programme, sits on real client case studies rather than vendor surveys. It plots organisations across efficiency accelerators, strategic enablers, capability creators and core process innovators, giving leaders a vocabulary for the adoption choice in front of them. The argument is field-tested, and it lands where boards actually decide.
His earlier role as Chief Evangelist at Obrizum, a deep-tech adaptive learning company, gave him an operator’s read on how AI changes capability development inside organisations. That experience now feeds the workforce side of his research, alongside published work in Training Magazine, the Learning Guild and ATD, and a seat on the Forbes Technology Council.
A physics doctorate sets the underlying disposition. Bernhardt is sceptical of pattern claims that do not survive the data, blunt about where AI actually shifts cost or quality, and explicit that there is no silver bullet for adoption at scale. For senior leaders weighing capital, structure and workforce moves at the same time, that posture is the point.
Key speaking topics
- Enterprise AI strategy and adoption
- Applied workforce solutions
- AI governance and operating model design
- Workforce transformation and capability development
- Evidence-based decision support for senior leaders
- AI in learning and performance
- Future of work in AI-augmented organisations
Ideal for
- C-suite leaders weighing AI investment, governance and operating model decisions
- CHROs and chief learning officers planning workforce capability shifts
- Strategy, transformation and innovation leads designing enterprise AI roadmaps
- Boards seeking an independent, research-backed read on AI adoption maturity
Audience outcomes
- A clearer map of where their organisation sits across the four adoption archetypes Bernhardt’s research identifies
- A sharper read on which AI claims to discount and which to act on
- Specific governance and operating model questions to put to internal teams and vendors
- A framework for talking about workforce polarisation as adoption deepens
- Language a senior team can carry into the next board conversation on AI