Author Archives: Sean Crichton-Browne

The MRI: Your Business Framework for AI Leadership and Acceleration

Most businesses know they need an AI strategy. Few have the framework to make it stick or the insight to understand why the human side of implementation is where it all succeeds or fails.

We are at an inflection point. AI is no longer a future consideration, it is a present-tense competitive reality. The leaders who will define the next decade are not those who simply adopt AI tools, but those who deploy them with strategic precision: in the right places, at the right time, driven by the right priorities.

The question is no longer whether to implement AI. The question is how to implement it in a way that is coherent, motivated, and tied directly to what drives your business forward. That is precisely what the MRI is designed to answer.

“AI applied without strategic anchoring is just technology spending. The MRI changes that, it gives leaders the clarity to act, and the logic to bring their people with them.”

THE FRAMEWORK

What Is the MRI?

The MRI is a business strategy framework, methodology and measurement tool, one that organisations have used to uncover blindspots, align leadership, and unlock the drivers of sustainable growth. It did not begin as an AI tool. But in practice, it has become indispensable to AI strategy, because it answers the question that most AI frameworks never ask: where does AI actually need to go in this specific business, and why?

It sits at the intersection of business performance and AI implementation, giving leaders not just a plan, but a logic and a motivation. That distinction matters more than it might appear. In a landscape littered with AI roadmaps that stall on execution, the MRI’s power lies in its ability to connect technology deployment to the priorities that already drive the business forward.

Think of it as a diagnostic and a compass in one. Most strategy reviews will tell you what is underperforming. The MRI tells you why it matters , surfacing the specific gaps most consequential to your revenue, productivity, and profitability, and giving leadership the understanding to know exactly where AI should go and why. The result is something genuinely rare: not a sprawling digital transformation wish list, but a focused, prioritised strategy with a clear line of sight from AI implementation to business outcomes that actually move the needle.

THE STRATEGIC LOGIC

AI Applied Where It Counts

One of the most common and costly mistakes in AI implementation is treating it as a technology project rather than a business strategy. Tools get deployed. Pilots get launched. And yet, months later, leaders find themselves unable to draw a clear line between their AI investment and their bottom line.

The MRI eliminates this disconnect by anchoring AI implementation to business priorities from the outset. The framework identifies with precision which operational gaps and performance levers matter most. AI tools are then selected and deployed specifically to address those areas. This is not AI for AI’s sake. This is AI as a performance accelerator targeted, measurable, and tied to what your business actually needs to grow.

FIELD PERSPECTIVE

What the Human Side of AI Looks Like in Practice

Technology alone does not transform organisations. People do. This is a principle that resonates deeply with leaders who have worked across diverse markets and nowhere is this more evident than in the insurance sector across South Florida and Latin America, where SP&E Consultants work with the MRI has been extensive.

We have run around 15 pilots across the Insurance and Reinsurance industry in multiple regions, working with leading organisations such as Chubb, Reaseguradora Patria, Summa RE, and La Meridional.

What becomes clear very quickly through the MRI is that the difference between success and failure always comes down to PEOPLE and TRUST. After interviewing our clients’ customers, the message is consistent, they want more time, more attention, and stronger long-term relationships. These are things AI will never replace.

The MRI gives leadership teams the language to have this conversation. It bridges what AI is capable of with what the business truly needs, and most importantly, it gives employees a reason to believe in the change.”

ALEJANDRO CERÓN – SP&E Consultants

With his extensive experience in professional services, particularly across insurance, reinsurance, and technology where regulatory complexity, underwriting discipline, and client trust are paramount, Alejandro has seen the MRI reveal something that traditional technology frameworks often overlook: the human layer.

When teams understand why AI is being introduced in a specific area and can clearly see its connection to both their own goals and those of the organisation, engagement follows naturally.

LEADERSHIP & ENGAGEMENT

A Framework Built for Both Leaders and Their Teams

Successful AI implementation is not a mandate handed down from the executive level. It is a shared endeavour. It is one that requires genuine engagement from leaders and employees alike. The MRI creates a shared language and a shared understanding of priorities across the organisation.

Executive alignment on where AI creates the greatest strategic value

Cross-functional engagement built around shared business priorities

A coherent AI implementation programme, not a disconnected collection of tools

Measurable performance outcomes linked directly to AI-enabled improvements“The MRI guides your AI strategy: application of AI where it counts, to drive growth, revenue, productivity, and profit drivers.”

FROM STRATEGY TO ACCELERATION

Building an Organisation Ready to Lead

The businesses that will lead in the AI era are not those with the most tools. They are those with the clearest strategy, the most engaged teams, and the most disciplined focus on performance outcomes. 

The MRI is the framework that makes this possible, turning the overwhelming complexity of AI adoption into a structured, prioritised, human-centred programme that leaders can drive with confidence and employees can embrace with conviction.

Start with the right diagnosis. Drive AI where it matters. Build an organisation that is ready to lead.

For more information on the MRI visit www.marketculture.com or email info@marketculture.com 

Your Strategy Is NOT the Problem

Your CULTURE is. And if you’re a senior leader right now, that’s either the most uncomfortable truth you’ve read today or the most liberating.

OFFER: If you make it to the end of this article, I’ll give you a free digital copy of The Human Culture Imperative. Not as a gimmick, but because if this message resonates, the book will matter to you.

Now, here’s the uncomfortable truth most leaders avoid:

Your strategy is probably not the problem.
Your culture is. The ability to execute.

And right now, in boardrooms everywhere, leaders are doubling down on these solutions.

They’re investing in AI.
In automation.
In transformation programs.

All while the one system that determines whether any of that works, the human system, is quietly breaking down.

And if you’re a senior leader, that’s either confronting or incredibly freeing.

The Data Leaders Can’t Ignore

Let’s start with what we know, not what we feel:

  • Companies with highly engaged workforces are 23% more profitable and 18% more productive than those with disengaged staff
  • According to Forrester’s Total Experience Score research, brands that align customer experience and brand experience can unlock up to 3.5× revenue growth
  • Over 1,000 organisations have used the Market Responsiveness Index (MRI) to transform and drive growth by uncovering blindspots hindering performance

So why, in 2026, are we still seeing:

  • Declining employee engagement
  • Falling role clarity
  • Eroding trust inside organisations

Because most leaders are solving the wrong problem.

AI Won’t Save a Broken Culture

Every executive conversation right now seems to orbit around AI.

Automation. Efficiency. Digital transformation.

And yet, beneath the surface, something more fundamental is breaking.

You cannot automate trust.
You cannot digitise clarity.
You cannot scale disconnection and expect performance.

You can layer world-class technology on top of a dysfunctional culture but all you’ll do is accelerate the dysfunction.

At its core, every organisation runs on a human system:

  • Relationships
  • Belief
  • Clarity
  • Listening

When those fail, everything fails.

“The greatest technological advancement in business history would be for leaders to truly listen to their people.”

That’s not a soft idea.

It’s a commercial one.

Three Perspectives. One Conclusion

The Human Culture Imperative wasn’t written from theory. It was discovered through three very different lived experiences:

  • Dr Linden Brown – The Researcher & Academic saw companies unable to execute what business schools taught
  • Dr Chris Brown – The Technologist watched brilliant strategies collapse inside misaligned cultures
  • Sean Crichton-Browne – The Sales Veteran learned that trust, not product, wins every time

Different paths. Same conclusion:

Culture is not a side conversation.


It is the system that determines whether anything works.

Culture Isn’t a Poster. It’s a System

One of the biggest misconceptions in business is that culture is intangible.

It’s not.

It’s observable. Measurable. Manageable.

The book introduces a practical system built on three core levers:

  1. Leadership Engagement
    If leaders aren’t aligned, nothing else will be.
  2. Employee Engagement
    If people don’t feel heard or clear, execution collapses.
  3. Customer Engagement
    If customers don’t feel it, growth stalls.

Miss one and the system leaks.

What Actually Drives Culture

Not values on a wall.


Not mission statements.

Behaviour.

Specifically, what your people do:

  • On a Tuesday afternoon
  • Under pressure
  • When no one is watching

That’s why the model focuses on eight behavioural disciplines, turning culture from an idea into a daily practice.

To make it real, it introduces the Market Responsiveness Index (MRI):

A diagnostic tool that visually maps your culture showing where you’re strong and where performance is quietly bleeding.

This Isn’t Theory. It Works.

When leaders treat culture as a performance system, not HR theatre, results follow:

  • A global medical company unified post-merger and saw a 41% share price increase
  • A household brand grew from $250M to $2.5B market cap through deep employee engagement
  • A luxury hotel prioritised people during crisis and achieved 80% occupancy with 20% repeat guests
  • A regional bank moved from niche player to top-tier competitor by pairing digital with human culture

Different industries. Same pattern.

Human culture drives commercial outcomes.

Five Questions Every Leader Should Sit With

No frameworks. No buzzwords. Just honesty.

  1. When did you last ask your frontline team what’s getting in their way—and act on it?
  2. What would your people really say about your culture if you weren’t in the room?
  3. Are you investing in technology to avoid fixing a people problem?
  4. Do your people clearly understand how their work connects to purpose?
  5. Are you equipped for the emotional demands of leadership or avoiding them?

If any of these sting, that’s not a problem.

That’s the signal.

The Shift: From Strategy to Humanity

Most leaders are trying to optimise systems.

The best leaders are rebuilding human connection inside those systems.

Because in the end:

  • Strategy sets direction
  • Technology accelerates execution
  • Culture determines whether anything actually happens

Be Human First

The Human Culture Imperative isn’t asking you to restructure your business.

It’s asking you to rethink how you lead.

Because the companies that win in the next decade won’t just be the most advanced.

They’ll be the most human.

And that starts with a simple shift:

Listen better.
Lead clearer.
Act on what matters.

One Last Thing

At the start, I said I’d give you a free digital copy of The Human Culture Imperative if you made it this far.

You did.

Which means something here likely resonated, maybe uncomfortably, maybe clearly, maybe urgently.

Because deep down, most leaders already know:

  • The strategy deck isn’t the issue
  • The tech stack isn’t the issue
  • The real constraint is what’s happening between people, every day

The book goes deeper into everything you’ve just read:

  • The full Market Responsiveness Index (MRI)
  • The eight behavioural disciplines in detail
  • Practical ways to measure, diagnose, and shift culture in real terms

No theory. No fluff. Just a system you can actually use.

Get the Book

Download your free digital copy of The Human Culture Imperative below by clicking on the link below. The coupon code is: beinghumanfirst

DOWNLOAD HERE

Read it with your leadership team.
Challenge it.
Debate it.

But most importantly, act on it.

Because the organisations that win from here won’t be the ones with the best strategy on paper.

They’ll be the ones whose people actually bring it to life.

“‘You Can’t Handle the Truth’: Why Most Leaders Say They Want Clarity — But Won’t Take the First Step”

In A Few Good Men, Jack Nicholson delivers the iconic line: “You can’t handle the truth.” In the end, though, the truth always prevails.

Building a business that succeeds in its early years is challenging. Sustaining that success as the organization grows is even harder and it starts with leaders being willing to face the truth, however uncomfortable it may be.

In the early stages, companies tend to share a common trait: a deep focus on customers. Teams are close to the market, leaders listen carefully, and the organisation is highly responsive to customer needs. Every customer matters.

That focus is often the source of early growth.

But as organisations scale, something begins to change.

Structures emerge. Processes multiply. Leaders spend more time managing internal systems than understanding customers. Attention gradually shifts from the market to internal metrics forecasts, budgets, targets, and quarterly results.

None of this is inherently wrong. It is a natural consequence of growth.

The challenge is that organisations can slowly lose visibility of the very thing that drives long-term performance: their ability to respond to customers and the market.

When this happens, the symptoms appear gradually. Growth becomes less predictable. New initiatives underperform. Customer loyalty weakens. Leaders sense that something is not quite right, yet the existing data rarely explains why.

Paradoxically, organisations often have more data than ever before, yet less clarity.

At MarketCulture, the problem we solve for organisations is clarity for leaders.

Clarity about how well their organisation is responding to the market.
Clarity about how aligned their teams are around customers and strategy.
And clarity about the cultural dynamics that either enable or limit growth.

This clarity is delivered through the Market Responsiveness Index (MRI), an organisational assessment completed anonymously by employees that measures how customer-centric, market-responsive and aligned a company truly is across leadership, teams and departments.

But gaining this clarity requires something that is sometimes in short supply in organisations:

Leaders willing to handle the truth.

Many organisations say they want feedback. Fewer are truly ready to hear it.

The MRI works because it surfaces what employees actually experience inside the organisation, not what leaders assume is happening.

One CEO we worked with in a mid-sized services company believed his organisation was highly customer focused and aligned. Revenue had grown consistently for several years, and customer complaints were relatively low.

However, when the MRI results and employee feedback came back, the picture was different.

Employees reported that decision-making had become slow, departments were working in silos, and frontline teams felt the organisation was becoming more internally focused. The biggest gap was not strategy, it was responsiveness.

To his credit, the CEO did something many leaders struggle to do.

He accepted the results.

Rather than challenging the data, he used it as a starting point for change. Over the following year, leadership simplified decision processes, increased cross-department collaboration, and re-focused teams around customer outcomes.

The result was not just cultural improvement.

Customer retention improved, product adoption increased, and the organisation regained momentum in the market.

What made the difference was not the data itself.

It was the leader’s willingness to see the organisation as it really was.

For leaders, this is often the hardest step.

Organisations rarely fail because leaders lack intelligence or effort. More often they struggle because they lack clear visibility of what is actually happening inside the business.

Every meaningful improvement begins with the same step:

seeing reality clearly.

The Market Responsiveness Index (MRI) gives leaders that visibility. It provides a clear, evidence-based view of how responsive the organisation truly is to customers and the market and where the greatest growth opportunities exist.

But insight alone is not the goal.

The goal is better decisions, stronger alignment, and sustainable growth.

The first step is simply understanding where your organisation really stands.

The MRI has been implemented by over 1,000 companies worldwide. Case studies and videos are available on our website.

If you would like to see how the MRI works and what it could reveal about your organisation, you can book a short introductory conversation with Sean Crichton-Browne.

Book HERE

In 15 minutes, you will gain a clear understanding of how the MRI works, what insights it provides, and how leaders are using it to bring clarity to their organisations. As a bonus you will receive a copy of our latest book “The Human Culture Imperative”

No obligation.

No cost.

Just clarity.

Leading Without the Title: How Johannes Spille is Driving Strategic Change at Rosen Group

This week I had the opportunity to catch up with Johannes from Rosen Group USA. The time I spent with him was so valuable that I felt compelled to put together a story about it.

Challenging Conventional Wisdom

I don’t often write about clients, but occasionally someone reshapes the way you think about leadership and influence. Johannes Spille did exactly that.

Conventional wisdom says meaningful organisational change starts at the Executive Leadership Team (ELT) table, strategy flows top-down and execution follows. Johannes challenged that assumption. Deeply committed to the organisation he serves and confident in its potential, he stepped into an initiative typically owned by the ELT and delivered significant impact.

Leading the MRI Initiative

I’ve had the privilege of partnering with Johannes at Rosen Group to implement the Market Responsiveness Index (MRI) over the past five months. At MarketCulture, we usually work directly with executive leadership teams. In this case, Johannes led the initiative himself, gaining full ELT support.

When he presented the MRI proposal to the ELT, it was exactly what they wanted to hear, clear, strategic, and actionable. They immediately gave him the green light to move forward, empowering him to implement the MRI and drive change across the organisation. What impressed me most was how he leveraged the MRI to elevate the conversation, moving the organisation from operational discussions to focused, strategic priorities.

Using the MRI as a Strategic Lever

As Johannes explained, the MRI allowed him to speak strategically rather than tactically, giving voice to leadership in a way that inspired collaboration and action. He didn’t treat it as a survey, he used it as a strategic lever to strengthen customer-centricity and organisational alignment.

The insights revealed blind spots previously unseen or unaddressed and created clarity on where change was needed, what to prioritise, and how to move forward confidently.

Engaging the Organisation

Rather than prescribing solutions, Johannes invited participation. He presented the findings transparently and asked one powerful question: What matters most?

The response was remarkable. He mobilised a Customer Champions team of 34 volunteers across 14 departments, a clear signal of engagement and shared ownership. Instead of defending the status quo, both management and employees leaned into improvement.

Strengthening Executive Collaboration

The process also deepened Johannes’ connection with the ELT. By presenting MRI insights objectively and facilitating a structured vote on 2026’s key focus disciplines — customer foresight, customer insight, collaboration, strategic alignment, and empowerment — he transformed insight into shared executive ownership. Discussion turned into commitment.

Today, structured 90-day plans and cross-functional alignment initiatives are underway, translating culture into execution.

About Rosen Group

For context, Rosen Group is a global engineering and technology company specialising in inspection, integrity management, and maintenance of critical industrial assets. In complex, high-risk industries, clarity and alignment aren’t optional, they’re essential.

What started in USA/Mexico (700 employees with approx 80% completing the assessment) is now positioned to scale globally, proof that influence isn’t defined by title, but by clarity, courage, and action.

Conclusion: Leadership in Action

Johannes is a thoughtful, strategic leader who pairs clear direction with the ability to mobilise people across functions. It has been a privilege to support this continued journey and witness tangible change take shape.

Leadership isn’t always about the seat you hold at the table. Sometimes, it’s about having the courage to start the conversation.

I look forward to partnering with Johannes and Rosen Group for many years to come.

The Market Responsiveness Index (MRI) is a strategic diagnostic tool that uncovers organisational blind spots, aligns teams, and turns insight into actionable, customer-focused change. Test with a small team and see for yourself. Click here