Put Your Brain in Gear When Using AI

Artificial Intelligence is becoming a powerful workplace tool. It can summarize information, analyze data, draft content, and generate ideas in seconds.
But there is a growing risk leaders need to recognize: AI can sound convincing even when it is wrong.
In an article by Erica Dhawan, she describes a legal case where attorneys used ChatGPT to help prepare a court filing. The brief looked professional, the reasoning seemed logical, and the citations appeared legitimate. There was only one problem: several of the cited cases did not exist. The AI had fabricated them.
The danger wasn't carelessness. It was trust.
Because the information was presented clearly, confidently, and professionally, nobody stopped to question it. Psychologists call this the "fluency heuristic"—our tendency to assume information is accurate when it is easy to process and sounds credible.
As leaders, we cannot allow polished answers to replace critical thinking.
When you find yourself thinking, "This is too good to be true," put your brain in gear. Dig deeper. Investigate. Verify the facts. Ask what assumptions were made, what information might be missing, and what evidence supports the conclusion.
AI can be an incredible assistant. It should never become a substitute for judgment.
The smooth answer is not always the wrong one—but it is often the one that deserves the most scrutiny.
Before You Act, Verify.
The biggest risk with AI isn't bad information. It's believable information that's wrong.
That's why we created the AI Verification Checklist for Leaders—a simple 5-minute tool designed to help leaders challenge assumptions, identify missing information, verify conclusions, and make better decisions before acting on AI-generated recommendations.
Download the free
AI Verification Checklist for Leaders and start asking better questions before making important decisions.


