
From Manual Chaos
to AI-Ready
Operations
A 2-day AI adoption and readiness workshop for the City of North Miami that produced five working department prototypes, a city-manager-directed governance initiative, and three departments committed to the build phase in under two weeks.
Hours-saved estimate based on workflow analysis during Session 1. Annual value projected at $35/hr loaded municipal employee cost over a 5-day work week.
Decades of institutional knowledge. Zero documentation. AI already in the building.
The City of North Miami arrived at this engagement carrying challenges endemic to municipal government at every scale. Eleven departments. Hundreds of workflows. Almost none of it written down.
Long-tenured employees had become the institutional memory by default. Processes existed because someone knew how to run them, not because they were documented anywhere a second person could find. When one employee held the entire address creation workflow in her head, or the entire PAR routing process in his, or the entire public records tracking system in hers, the city was one resignation away from losing that function entirely.
At the same time, AI was already in the building. Staff were using generative tools informally, without guardrails, without policy, and without awareness of where public-sector liability began. The city had no governance framework, no usage standards, and no roadmap for what responsible AI adoption looked like at their scale.
That is what we walked into. And that is exactly where we operate best.
What we found. What we built in response.
- Knowledge silos. Entire workflows stored only in individual employees' heads with no SOP, no backup, and no transfer plan.
- Manual-everything culture. From Excel-based address tracking to screenshot-and-email public records outreach, manual processes were the norm across every department.
- Broken approval chains. Sign-offs missed, requests lost in email threads, no real-time visibility into where any item stood.
- Ungoverned AI use. Staff using AI tools independently with no policy, no consistency, and no awareness of Florida public-sector data liability.
- Reactive bandwidth drain. Teams spending the majority of their time on fires rather than strategic work.
- No citizen self-service. Every resident inquiry required direct staff contact for questions AI could handle automatically.
- Address workflow tracker converting a single-employee manual process into a multi-stakeholder system with automated sign-off alerts.
- HR PAR routing tracker replacing manual Excel and email coordination with a structured intake-to-completion pipeline across seven stages.
- Finance AI team assistant with seven modules covering policy drafting, audit prep, budget analysis, and compliance checks for non-technical staff.
- Public records outreach automation replacing screenshot-and-email workflows with filtered views and one-click Florida Statute 119 compliance emails.
- 311 citizen services AI triage automating complaint intake, routing, and confirmation with human approval preserved at every decision point.
- Document intelligence via Gamma converting scattered notes and complex documents into structured, constituent-ready presentations and summaries.
The Foundational Fracture
Across North Miami's departments, we identified the same recurring pattern: one employee, one workflow, no documentation, no backup. We call this a Foundational Fracture. It is the difference between institutional knowledge and institutional risk.
The process for assigning addresses to newly developed parcels, logging them into city systems, and coordinating sign-offs from the post office and city appraiser's office existed nowhere in writing. It relied entirely on manual Excel tracking and individual emails. No SOP. No backup. No escalation path.
During Session 1, we used a voice note protocol to capture her workflow in real time. We then used AI to research peer city processes, extract the steps, and generate a working tracker mockup within the session. The result included structured address entry, automated stakeholder alerts, timestamped sign-off tracking, a status dashboard, and filtered task views.
We found Foundational Fractures in four departments during this engagement: Address Authority, Public Records, HR, and Code Compliance. This pattern is not unique to North Miami. It is endemic to municipal government. Our workshop surfaces it. Our methodology begins closing it.
Session 1 created the intelligence. Session 2 converted it into tools.
Two sessions, two weeks apart, with fundamentally different purposes.
Foundation, Discovery & Proof
We opened with proof, not theory. Real case studies from municipalities comparable to North Miami in size and operational complexity. Staff saw how similar cities had deployed citizen-facing chatbots, automated form-heavy processes, and systematically reduced manual volume. This shifted the room from "should we use AI" to "here is what it looks like when cities like ours already do."
The second half was structured discovery. We facilitated a live workflow audit across departments, surfacing gaps, documenting bottlenecks, mapping sign-off failures, and identifying which processes were most ready for intervention. Everything captured in real time. By end of session, we had a working map of the city's operational fractures and a clear picture of where AI would create the most immediate impact.
From Insight to Working Prototypes
Session 2 became something most municipal teams have never experienced: live building from their own challenges. Using the gap map from Session 1, we built five working department tools in the room. Not slides. Not recommendations. Working prototypes built from the city's actual pain points, demonstrated by end of day.
Session 2 was also reshaped by something that happened between sessions. The city manager, responding to what came out of Session 1, directed the CIO to begin building AI guardrails before Session 2 started. The planned closed CIO brainstorm became an open stakeholder session where department heads helped shape the governance framework in real time.
Five working prototypes. Built in the room. From the city's own challenges.
Converted a single-employee manual process into a structured digital system with address entry, automated stakeholder alerts to the post office and city appraiser, timestamped sign-off tracking, and a status dashboard. Built from a live voice note workflow capture during Session 1.
Foundational Fracture · ResolvedReplaced manual Excel tracking and email-based department routing with a structured intake-to-completion pipeline. Tracks PAR stage, department ownership, and sign-off status across seven stages from submission to final approval, with live KPI visibility for department leads.
OperationsA prompt-based AI assistant with seven modules: Policy Copilot, Audit Prep, Budget Analysis, Compliance Check, Document Templates, FAQ, and Training. Built for non-technical finance staff to draft communications, synthesize financial reports, and navigate Florida Statute Chapter 218 for routine items without legal consultation.
Staff ProductivityAutomated the pothole and complaint intake workflow from a 2-3 day manual process to a same-session triage system. AI extracts location, issue type, and priority from email, voicemail transcripts, and web forms. Human approval preserved at every routing decision, with auto-generated Florida-compliant confirmation emails.
Citizen ServicesStaff across departments learned to take scattered notes, meeting transcripts, process outlines, and complex institutional documents including dense finance reports and convert them into structured presentations and constituent-ready plain-language summaries. For a city where institutional knowledge had lived in individuals' heads for decades, this created a repeatable system for externalizing and communicating that knowledge at scale. Departments previously spending days on council presentations reduced that process to hours.
Knowledge Management · City-WideThey finally saw what had been stuck in their heads for 10, 15, 20 years built into something they could actually use. And not just use, but hand to a colleague.
The biggest win did not come from a prototype. It came from a directive.
After Session 1, the organizational response was immediate and unscripted. The city manager directed the CIO and his department to begin developing a formal AI governance policy, defining how city staff could use AI safely, compliantly, and effectively. This directive did not wait for Session 2. It happened within the first week.
The city manager tasked the CIO to build AI guardrails.
Before Session 2 even happened.
The CIO's department had originally planned a closed brainstorming session during Session 2. That was restructured before the session began. The city manager's directive opened the guardrails conversation to department heads and stakeholders across the city, who joined not just to observe but to help build the policy framework in real time.
The city did not come in ready to build AI governance. The workshop created the conditions for the city manager to demand it.
In their own words.
The workshop was very understandable. We loved seeing what other similar cities were actually doing, real examples we could see ourselves in, not just theory.
Going from learning about AI to seeing something built from our own challenges, in the room, the same day. That was the moment it became real for our team.
We finally saw what had been in our heads for 10, 15, 20 years built into something we could actually use and hand to a colleague. That was the breakthrough.
The workshop was the start. Not the finish.
Most government AI training ends when the room clears. This one did not. The City of North Miami left with infrastructure, not just information.
Three departments committed to taking the Session 2 prototypes into full operational buildout.
Staff have continued training sessions for several weeks post-workshop, addressing real implementation questions as they arise.
Annual return engagement to update staff and governance frameworks as the city's AI maturity evolves.
CIO-led AI guardrails policy in development with cross-departmental stakeholder input, initiated during Session 2.
Critical single-employee knowledge silos identified and documented across Address Authority, Public Records, HR, and Code Compliance.
Complete operational gap mapping creating a phased AI integration roadmap across the full municipal operation.
What people ask before they book.
What does an AI readiness workshop for city government include?
How much does a government AI readiness workshop cost?
How quickly does a city see results from an AI readiness engagement?
What is a Foundational Fracture and why does it matter?
Do we need technical staff for the workshop to succeed?
How does AI governance fit into the workshop?
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