Why AI literacy is no longer optional
Article 4 of the AI Act requires that all personnel involved in the operation or use of AI systems have sufficient AI literacy. For Swiss organisations with EU exposure — and that includes most of Geneva's financial and international ecosystem — this is not a recommendation, it is a regulatory obligation.
Yet most awareness initiatives fail: a one-hour webinar does not change behaviour, and a purely technical session alienates non-technical teams. I design AI literacy programmes that are modular, role-specific and measurable — because regulators will ask for evidence, not just slide decks.
Every programme is built around your real tools (ChatGPT, Copilot, Claude), your real risks (data leaks, hallucinations, bias) and your real Swiss regulatory context (nFADP, FINMA, AI Act). The result: teams that are informed, confident and compliant.
AI literacy is the foundation of every other AI initiative: without it, adoption stalls and risks multiply.