Enterprise AI has quietly left the lab. Your buildings did not get the memo.
Open AI just released its 2025 “state of enterprise AI” report. Buried in the charts is a simple truth: AI is no longer the side project of a keen intern, it is becoming the nervous system of how work gets done.
ChatGPT Enterprise usage is up multiples, structured workflows are up even more, and the average organisation is consuming hundreds of times more "reasoning" than a year ago. That is not people asking for holiday recipes. That is systems work.
What struck me reading it, as someone building Cleverly to bring AI and automation to real estate and facilities, is how clearly the data exposes a gap our industry still has. Enterprise AI is sprinting ahead. Most buildings are still jogging behind, carrying clipboards.
One of the headline findings is that usage of structured workflows like Projects and Custom GPTs is up 19x year-to-date. That is the moment AI stops being "ask me a question" and starts being "run this process whenever X happens."
In software companies, that looks like AI-assisted code reviews, automated security checks, personalised marketing. In facilities, it should look like:
The technology clearly exists. The OpenAI data show enterprises turning AI into repeatable, integrated workflows. The question for our sector is not "does this work" but "why are we still accepting email inboxes as a workflow engine."
The report says 75% of workers using AI feel it has improved the speed or quality of their work, and typical users are saving 40 to 60 minutes per day. Heavy users save more than 10 hours a week.
Translate that into a hard FM context:
The numbers in the report are sector-agnostic, but the impact in facilities is unusually asymmetric. We run on thin margins, fragmented data and a heroic amount of human glue. Every reclaimed hour in an FM team tends to go straight back into resident happiness, uptime or safety.
OpenAI talks about "frontier" workers and firms. The top 5% of users send 6x more messages than the median. Frontier firms send 2x more messages per seat and integrate AI more deeply across teams.
You can feel that split in our world already. I meet FM leaders who are using AI to:
Then I meet others who are still trying to get a clean asset list out of three spreadsheets, two contractors and a filing cabinet.
The gap is not intelligence. It is implementation. Frontier FM operators behave as if AI is a colleague that sits inside their existing systems. Median operators treat AI like a search engine they occasionally ask for a template.
OpenAI says it releases a new feature or capability roughly every three days. The bottleneck is no longer what the models can do, it is whether organisations can adapt processes, governance and culture quickly enough to take advantage.
In real estate and facilities, the usual suspects show up:
If we do nothing, the outcome is predictable. The "frontier" operators who lean in will offer faster response times, better reporting, cleaner audits and more competitive pricing. Everyone else will be competing with a 10–20 percent operational handicap they can neither see nor quantify.
So what do you do if you run an FM business, property portfolio or operations team and do not have a resident AI lab in the basement? A few pragmatic steps I see working with Cleverly customers:
The OpenAI report is largely about big enterprises across sectors. The pattern is clear though: AI is moving from experimentation to infrastructure.
In real estate and facilities, we have a slightly unfair advantage. Our data may be messy, but our workflows are incredibly rich and repeatable. That is exactly where AI and automation are most powerful.
If your competitors are quietly turning AI into the invisible operating system of their business, and you are still manually forwarding jobs from one shared inbox to another, you are not standing still. You are moving backwards.
The good news is that the technology curve is finally working in our favour. You no longer need a data science team to get started, you need intent, a few good processes and systems that actually talk to each other.
That is what we are trying to build with Cleverly: a platform that lets facilities and real estate teams plug into this new wave of AI, without needing to become AI companies themselves.
The state of enterprise AI is clear. The remaining question is: what is the state of AI in your buildings?
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