"AI consultant" is a title anyone can claim right now, which makes it hard to know whether you need one. Here's a grounded way to decide, and what genuinely good advice looks like.
TL;DR: You probably need help when you can see the opportunity but can't translate it into action, when you're about to spend real money and want to avoid a costly wrong turn, or when you've tried tools and they didn't stick. You probably don't when your needs are simple and you have time to learn. Good advice is vendor-neutral, plain-spoken, and tied to your actual problems, not a pitch for one platform.
Signs it's worth it
You keep reading about AI but can't see how it applies to your business; you're about to invest and don't want an expensive mistake; you've bought tools that didn't get used; or you simply don't have time to work it out and the cost of inaction is mounting. In each case, an outside perspective saves more than it costs.
Signs you can skip it
If your needs are simple, you enjoy the learning, and you have the hours, you can likely get a long way yourself. Start with a free scan and the platform's own templates. Don't pay for advice you'd happily do yourself.
What good advice looks like
It's vendor-neutral (or openly discloses any commission), explains things so you understand them, starts from your problems rather than a product, and leaves you more capable rather than more dependent. That honest-broker standard is exactly how we work.
Key takeaways
- Worth it when you see opportunity but can't action it, or a wrong turn would be costly
- Skippable when needs are simple and you have time to learn
- Good advice is vendor-neutral, plain-spoken, problem-led
- It should leave you more capable, not more dependent
Frequently asked questions
What does an AI consultant actually do?
The good ones diagnose where AI and automation will pay off for you, help you avoid costly mistakes, and get a working system in place, then hand it over.
How do I avoid a "consultant" who's just selling one tool?
Ask how they're paid and whether they recommend across tools. Disclosure and vendor-neutrality are the tells.
Can I get value from a single session?
Often yes, a focused session can save you from an expensive wrong turn. Book one and judge by what you walk away with.
Is a consultant different from an agency?
A consultant advises; an agency also builds. Some (us included) do both: diagnose, then deliver, so the advice doesn't die on the shelf.
Want to see where your business stands? Get a free AEO visibility scan, or book a free strategy session.
Written by Katrina Curll, Founder of Linkai Digital. Twenty years in marketing, including seven as a Vice President at Forrester, helping Australian service businesses build systems that capture, convert and keep more clients.
