The conversation about artificial intelligence dominated every boardroom meeting over the past year. Yet the question almost no one dares to ask out loud is not which model to adopt, but whether the organization itself is in a position to take advantage of it. The answer, in most companies across the region, lives in the technology core: in those systems that grew layer by layer over fifteen years and that today keep data under lock and key. Before thinking about algorithms, it is worth looking inward.
In short: AI does not work on data trapped in silos or on systems that don't talk to each other. Modernizing the core means exposing information through APIs, tidying up the architecture, and guaranteeing data quality. Without that foundation, any AI initiative stays in perpetual pilot.
For years, legacy systems did their job: recording transactions, issuing invoices, controlling inventories. They were designed to operate, not to share. Artificial intelligence changes that premise at its root, because its raw material is not the process but the data, and it needs that data available, clean, and in motion.
An AI model, whether for demand forecasting or customer service, depends on three conditions the traditional core rarely offers:
When these conditions are missing, AI does not fail for lack of talent or budget: it fails because it finds nothing to feed on.
In our work with companies across different sectors in Latin America, the obstacles repeat with surprising regularity. They are not exotic problems; they are accumulated technical debts that are now coming due.
These gaps do not prevent operating, but they do prevent scaling. And AI, by definition, is a bet on scale.
This is where enterprise architecture stops being an abstract concept and becomes decisive. Its job is to organize how the organization's processes, data, and applications connect, so that the whole functions as a system and not as an archipelago.
Good architecture prepares the ground for AI because it establishes a coherent data layer, defines where each piece of information lives, and reduces duplication. It also introduces decoupling: when systems communicate through standard interfaces, it is possible to add a new AI capability without rewriting everything that came before.
The important point is one of sequence. Trying to build AI on top of a disorganized architecture is like building an additional floor on cracked foundations. Modernizing the core does not compete with AI: it is its prerequisite.
Being prepared for AI is not having bought a software license or having hired a data scientist. It is a condition of maturity built across several dimensions simultaneously. At SUMāTO we understand AI-readiness as the convergence of four fronts:
An AI-ready organization can experiment quickly, take a pilot to production without rebuilding its infrastructure, and, above all, repeat the process. That ability to repeat is what separates those who run isolated demonstrations from those who obtain sustained value.
The path does not require replacing everything at once; that would be risky and, in practice, unnecessary. We recommend an orderly progression that delivers partial results as it advances.
Map which systems exist, what data they produce, and how they connect today. Without this inventory, any investment is blind.
Build an integration layer that allows access to the information in existing systems without touching their internals. It is the highest-return investment: it frees the data without the risk of rewriting the legacy.
Define single sources of truth, quality rules, and clear responsibilities over each data domain.
Progressively separate business logic from interfaces, so that new capabilities can be added without side effects.
Choose a bounded, measurable use case that demonstrates value while, at the same time, testing the new technology foundation.
The temptation to start with the flashy use case is enormous. It is worth resisting. A successful AI pilot on dirty data produces unreliable results that erode internal confidence, and rebuilding that confidence costs more than having done things right from the start.
Modernizing the core is not glamorous, but it is what turns the promise of AI into an operational capability. The organizations that invest in their technology foundation in these months will be the ones that, when the technology matures even further, can move without friction while others keep extracting data by hand.
Do I need to replace my current systems to use AI?
Not necessarily. In most cases it is enough to expose the data of existing systems through APIs and to organize the quality of the information. Full replacement is the most expensive option and rarely the first recommended.
How long does it take an organization to become "AI-ready"?
It depends on the starting point and the complexity of the core. The prudent path is to advance in stages, with visible results at each phase, rather than seeking a complete transformation before obtaining any value.
Where should I start if the budget is limited?
With the diagnosis and with exposing the data through an integration layer. It is the lowest-risk, highest-return investment, because it enables everything else without rewriting what already exists.
Isn't enterprise architecture only for large corporations?
No. Every organization with several systems that must coordinate benefits from organizing how its data and applications connect. Scale changes the scope, not the relevance.
Preparing for the AI era begins by looking honestly at the technology core you already have. You don't need to have everything resolved to begin; you need to know where you stand and chart the right sequence. At SUMāTO we accompany that journey, from the architecture diagnosis to the construction of a foundation ready for AI.
If your organization wants to turn the conversation about AI into a real capability, let's talk. Write to us here and let's take the first step together.