
Now Is the Time of the Creative Technologist
8 October 2025 at 11:00:00
As AI reshapes the way businesses operate, one thing is becoming clear: technology alone isn’t enough.
Success depends on the people who can connect strategy, creativity, and technical know-how to make AI actually work.
Enter the Creative Technologist: part innovator, part problem solver, and part translator between ambition and execution.
Businesses that recognise and invest in this skillset will be the ones that move beyond pilots and hype to real impact.

Now Is the Time of the Creative Technologist
For years, the role of Creative Technologist has been a peripheral figure, the hybrid who links creativity and tech, usually brought in for niche projects to “make it work.”
That time is over.
As businesses race to make sense of AI, this hybrid skillset is no longer nice to have. It’s essential.
The companies that will win with AI aren’t the ones throwing money at new tools or building flashy pilots. They’re the ones who’ve adapted their people, thinking, and structures to include the skills of a Creative Technologist.
That means a mix of:
• Business acumen, connecting AI directly to commercial goals.
• Entrepreneurial mindset, testing, learning, and iterating at pace.
• Solution design, building things people actually use.
• Creativity, thinking differently, not just digitally.
• Technical fluency, knowing how the stuff works (and when it doesn’t).
This combination bridges a crucial gap between what leaders want AI to do and what it can actually deliver.
Now is the time of the Creative Technologist.
Every organisation serious about AI needs this capability at its core.
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The Acceleration Problem and the Pilot Graveyard
The pace of AI development is ridiculous. New tools and updates land weekly, each claiming to be the next big thing. For most businesses, that’s both exciting and exhausting.
The potential is huge, but the reality is messy. Many companies are moving fast but not forward.
You’ve probably heard it before:
“We’ve spent millions on AI and it’s not delivering.”
“Our tools aren’t being adopted.”
“Nothing integrates properly.”
“It’s all pilots and no progress.”
“Everything’s out of date by the time it launches.”
These aren’t technology problems. They’re translation problems.
AI isn’t something you install. It’s something you embed, across workflows, teams, and culture. Yet many businesses are still using the same old IT playbooks, focused on control and compliance rather than creativity and connection.
The result is a lot of activity, but very little impact. Endless pilots. Slow adoption. And a growing sense that everyone else is getting further ahead.
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The Skills and Strategy Gap
Most leadership teams get the why of AI. They see the opportunity.
The challenge is the how.
It’s not that leaders lack vision, far from it. But the teams tasked with delivery often lack the right mix of skills. Traditional IT departments are brilliant at control and reliability, but AI needs speed, creativity, and experimentation.
It’s a different way of working entirely.
That’s why leaders need new types of people around them, those who understand both business and technology, who can connect strategic ambition with real world execution.
People who can translate vision into action.
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The Skills Businesses Need to Deliver AI
To make AI stick, you need people who can blend:
• Commercial thinking with creative problem solving.
• Curiosity with technical understanding.
• Strategy with the ability to just get on and build things.
These are the hallmarks of a Creative Technologist, the person who makes ideas real and scalable.
And right now, they’re worth their weight in gold.
Every business that’s serious about AI should be investing in Creative Technologists, not just hiring them but helping existing teams think and work in the same way.
Because success with AI isn’t about tools.
It’s about people who know how to use them, adapt them, and turn them into something valuable.
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Building a Culture of Creative Technologists
Getting AI right isn’t about finding the perfect platform. It’s about building the right environment.
Creative Technologists sit at the intersection of creativity, technology, and commercial strategy. They understand ambition, but they also know how to deliver. They’re translators, connectors, and doers, the people who make progress happen.
But this mindset shouldn’t live in one job title.
Every business can benefit from thinking like a Creative Technologist:
• Be curious, not cautious.
• Try things, don’t overthink them.
• Work together, not in silos.
• Focus on impact, not process.
It means investing in training, breaking down barriers, and building confidence across teams.
AI doesn’t transform businesses, people do.
And the people who can bridge creativity and technology are the ones leading the way.
Now really is the time of the Creative Technologist, and every business needs one.
What You Can Do Right Now
Start looking for people in your organisation who already show the attributes of a Creative Technologist. They might not have that title, and they might not even work in digital. You’ll find them in product, operations, marketing, or design. People who are curious, creative, and capable of making things happen.
Champion them. Give them space to lead experiments, test ideas, and shape how AI is used across the business.
Because when you empower people who think like Creative Technologists, you don’t just accelerate AI adoption.
You change the culture around it.
