Where does AI deliver the most value, who oversees it, and how do we ensure our clients’ information is protected – these are a few of the questions that we’ve been receiving and asking ourselves. So we put pen to paper and created a framework for BlueSky Communications’ first AI policy
What AI is genuinely good at
AI has sent us on an adventurous ride so far and as we’ve rolled up our sleeves, tested the tools and educated ourselves, we are also in awe of its potential.
On a basic level, we use AI where it makes us more efficient: tracking coverage, assembling data for wrap reports, and even pressure-testing ideas, so our team can focus on the insights behind the numbers. It speeds up the foundational work and frees our team’s attention for more strategic thinking.
What AI can’t do
But generating communications and ‘doing’ communications are very different things.
Strategy is judgment, not output. AI can give you a hundred messaging options, but it can’t tell you which one is right for your business, in this moment, given your goals or reputational risk. That’s the difference between options and a decision.
Relationships are built by people. Earned media comes from years of trust between communications professionals and the journalists and creators they work with. AI can draft a pitch; it can’t have built the relationship that makes the pitch land.
Accountability can’t be automated. In a crisis, someone has to own the decision, not just generate it. Human oversight isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s the safeguard.
Why “faster” was never the point
We govern our AI use through a formal internal policy, never feeding confidential client information into public platforms, and every client-facing deliverable is reviewed and owned by a human. (We’ve answered the practical questions, on confidentiality, transparency, and more, in detail in our AI FAQ.)
The bottom line
AI hasn’t made strategic communications obsolete. Instead, it clarified what the job was always about. When a machine can produce a competent first draft of nearly anything, the premium shifts to what machines can’t do: knowing what’s worth saying, having the relationships to make it heard, and standing behind the decision when it counts.
As we continue to test and learn, we’re approaching it with an open mind and a measure of diligence and sound judgment. Let’s see where that takes us.
Curious how AI can help your communications? It’s a conversation more clients are starting, and one we’re always happy to have. Get in touch.