Programs
Tell us what you need. We'll figure out the rest.
Operational Intelligence & Automation
Discover. Design. Build. Deploy. Integrate. Deliver
Your competition isn't using AI because it's trendy. They're using it because it works. And if you're still trying to figure out where to start, you're already behind.
We work with businesses and organizations (including non-profits) that know something needs to change but aren't sure what that looks like. You can see the work piling up. You know parts of your operation should be automated. You know there's a better way to run things. What's missing is a clear path from intention to execution.
We design and build custom AI and automation solutions.
Our work includes workflow automation, internal AI tools, system integration, and decision-support systems built around real operational needs.
What we do
- Work directly with your team to identify bottlenecks, inefficiencies, and high-friction processes, then design systems that fit how you actually work.
- Architect, develop, and deploy custom automation and AI systems.
- Integrate new tools into your existing workflows, platforms, and governance structures.
- Your team learns to operate, maintain, and extend these systems themselves. No vendor lock-in. No endless retainers.
- Design and deliver online AI literacy courses for professionals and organizational teams who need a clear, operational understanding of how AI affects decision-making, workflows, and accountability.
Civic & Cultural AI Literacy
We work with community members who want to understand how AI is reshaping work, culture, and everyday life, and who don't want that understanding outsourced to hype or fear.
Our community programs are built on a simple premise: meaningful participation in a technological society requires judgment and context, not just access to tools.
These sessions are designed for people across ages, backgrounds, and professions because AI now cuts across every domain of life. Workplaces, schools, creative practice, public services, and personal decision-making are already being reorganized around these systems.
We don't approach this as basic "AI literacy" — instead we treat it as civic and cultural literacy.
Participants engage with how AI systems actually work, where their limits are, and how they are being deployed in ways that shape power, labor, and opportunity. We examine real uses, trade-offs, and real consequences. Participants get to understand the conditions under which these technologies are introduced, normalized, and resisted, and what room still exists for human agency, responsibility, and choice.
In addition to live sessions, we develop online AI literacy courses for community members who want a structured, accessible way to understand how AI shapes work, creativity, public services, and everyday life.
Applied R&D & Implementation
AIRI's Research and Development unit designs and delivers implementation-ready AI systems for use in real institutional and community settings.
Our work advances scalable solutions at the intersection of artificial intelligence, organizational practice, and social impact. Research here is oriented toward deployment, long-term use, and adaptation under real constraints.
Over the next five years, our work is guided by five priorities that shape both technical development and applied research.
- Current work includes building and piloting the Display Governance Protocol (DGP), alongside internal workflow systems for non-profits and public organizations that operationalize visual-AI governance, compliance, and accountability inside existing institutional infrastructure.
- Inclusive interaction design.
- Low-barrier deployment, enabling adoption across organizations with varied technical capacity.
- Scalable ethical frameworks, supporting responsible use across organizations and public systems.
- Strategies to address AI-driven misinformation, with attention to governance, policy, and public resilience.
A central component of this work involves developing custom workflow systems for non-profits and civil-society organizations. These systems are being designed to be housed internally, with operational features that allow for modification over time as organizational needs change.