Marketdash

Why Companies Are Realizing AI Responsibility Is Actually About Survival

MarketDash Editorial Team
8 hours ago
Maria Luciana Axente, a leading voice in AI ethics and governance, explains why responsible AI isn't about checking boxes—it's about maintaining human agency, trust, and connection in an increasingly automated world. Her insights span corporate strategy, marketing authenticity, and the profound impact AI is having on children.

Here's something that should keep business leaders up at night: AI isn't coming to transform your industry. It's already here, quietly reshaping how decisions get made, how culture evolves, and where value gets created. And while everyone's racing to adopt it faster, a different set of questions is becoming equally urgent—questions about trust, responsibility, and whether we're building systems that actually work for humans.

Maria Luciana Axente spends her days thinking about exactly these tensions. As a global authority on AI ethics, governance, and responsible innovation, she advises organizations trying to figure out how to scale artificial intelligence without sacrificing human agency or eroding public trust. Her work cuts across corporate strategy, public policy, and international frameworks, including meaningful contributions to AI for Children initiatives alongside UNICEF.

In a recent conversation with the AI Speakers Agency, Axente laid out her thinking on how businesses can actually embed responsibility into their daily AI operations, why human connection matters more than ever when algorithms are writing your marketing copy, and what executives consistently miss when they're moving fast on emerging tech. She also reflected on AI's generational impact—why the choices companies make right now aren't just about quarterly results, but about shaping society itself.

The key insight? AI isn't something that simply happens to organizations. It's something leaders actively shape. The real question is whether companies treat AI as a tool for optimization, or as a system that reflects their values, culture, and intentions.

Making AI Responsibility Real, Not Theoretical

When asked about practical frameworks for responsible AI—the kind that actually matter rather than living in some dusty handbook—Axente got straight to the point.

"It starts by making responsibility visible, and this is where the biggest challenge is," she explained. "Currently, there is open-source expertise on how to do it, how to ensure AI systems behave responsibly. But the reality is policies could end up being buried in a handbook."

So what's the alternative? Making those best practices come alive. "That means training, yes, it's very important and there's a lot of focus on training, but also psychological safety, so people feel not just empowered to question AI, but also have a choice not to use it, and are empowered to be at their best when using AI."

Axente runs workshops that simulate real-world dilemmas across procurement, marketing, and operations, asking participants what responsibility actually looks like in their specific context. "And that's how you turn theory into culture, by bringing people in and allowing them, and empowering them, to be part of how AI is changing their workplace. And that's what responsible intelligence helps companies build."

The Marketing Paradox: More AI, Less Authenticity?

Marketing has been hit particularly hard by the AI revolution. Hyperpersonalization, synthetic media, predictive analytics—the buzzwords pile up quickly. But Axente thinks most companies are focusing on the wrong trends.

"The real trend, I would say, is human resonance," she noted. "I see marketing sitting casually in between business and art. And if that's the case, the output of marketing has to resonate with us, with humans."

Here's the uncomfortable reality: we're entering an era where AI can pump out enormous volumes of content. "It's a bit intimidating to see how much synthetic content the internet has at the moment, and we're only just getting started. But you know what? It's only us who can create meaning."

The critical question becomes: how do you use AI to deepen authenticity rather than dilute it? "And that's the theme I love unpacking in keynotes because when leaders get this, their marketing changes entirely," Axente said.

What AI Is Doing to Our Kids

Perhaps nowhere are the stakes higher than in Axente's work on AI and children's rights. The impact, she says, couldn't be more profound.

"What we're seeing is that AI as a phenomenon is reshaping their identity, relationships, learning, even self-worth. It's enough to look at how the younger generation interacts with social media and how much time they're spending online."

Through her collaborations with UNICEF and other organizations, she's encountered research showing just how embedded digital platforms have become in children's lives. "And this reshaping happens quietly. These kids didn't choose the algorithm or the platform, and they can't control it. They have no agency."

That's why ethics in AI for children matters so intensely. "Because we're not just building tech for today, we're also encoding norms for the next generation. If we get this wrong, they will be the ones to pay the price. And that is my mission and my passion. I advocate for education, policy, and cultural awareness every single time I speak, with a focus on AI for children."

The Message That Matters Most

When people walk out of Axente's keynotes, what does she most want them to take with them?

"That we have agency and we have control," she said. "And I think this is what's not as clear when you open the newspaper and read the latest interview of a tech guru. AI isn't something out there. It's in the systems we use, the decisions we make, the culture we shape."

Her goal is for people to leave not just informed, but activated and empowered. "To know that we still have control on our side over how we use AI to work for us."

And for companies ready to move beyond just talking about it? "That's where responsible intelligence comes in. Because this isn't just a keynote. It's a movement on how to make AI work for us as individuals and as a collective."

This interview with Maria Luciana Axente was conducted by Tabish Ali of The Champions Speakers Agency.

Why Companies Are Realizing AI Responsibility Is Actually About Survival

MarketDash Editorial Team
8 hours ago
Maria Luciana Axente, a leading voice in AI ethics and governance, explains why responsible AI isn't about checking boxes—it's about maintaining human agency, trust, and connection in an increasingly automated world. Her insights span corporate strategy, marketing authenticity, and the profound impact AI is having on children.

Here's something that should keep business leaders up at night: AI isn't coming to transform your industry. It's already here, quietly reshaping how decisions get made, how culture evolves, and where value gets created. And while everyone's racing to adopt it faster, a different set of questions is becoming equally urgent—questions about trust, responsibility, and whether we're building systems that actually work for humans.

Maria Luciana Axente spends her days thinking about exactly these tensions. As a global authority on AI ethics, governance, and responsible innovation, she advises organizations trying to figure out how to scale artificial intelligence without sacrificing human agency or eroding public trust. Her work cuts across corporate strategy, public policy, and international frameworks, including meaningful contributions to AI for Children initiatives alongside UNICEF.

In a recent conversation with the AI Speakers Agency, Axente laid out her thinking on how businesses can actually embed responsibility into their daily AI operations, why human connection matters more than ever when algorithms are writing your marketing copy, and what executives consistently miss when they're moving fast on emerging tech. She also reflected on AI's generational impact—why the choices companies make right now aren't just about quarterly results, but about shaping society itself.

The key insight? AI isn't something that simply happens to organizations. It's something leaders actively shape. The real question is whether companies treat AI as a tool for optimization, or as a system that reflects their values, culture, and intentions.

Making AI Responsibility Real, Not Theoretical

When asked about practical frameworks for responsible AI—the kind that actually matter rather than living in some dusty handbook—Axente got straight to the point.

"It starts by making responsibility visible, and this is where the biggest challenge is," she explained. "Currently, there is open-source expertise on how to do it, how to ensure AI systems behave responsibly. But the reality is policies could end up being buried in a handbook."

So what's the alternative? Making those best practices come alive. "That means training, yes, it's very important and there's a lot of focus on training, but also psychological safety, so people feel not just empowered to question AI, but also have a choice not to use it, and are empowered to be at their best when using AI."

Axente runs workshops that simulate real-world dilemmas across procurement, marketing, and operations, asking participants what responsibility actually looks like in their specific context. "And that's how you turn theory into culture, by bringing people in and allowing them, and empowering them, to be part of how AI is changing their workplace. And that's what responsible intelligence helps companies build."

The Marketing Paradox: More AI, Less Authenticity?

Marketing has been hit particularly hard by the AI revolution. Hyperpersonalization, synthetic media, predictive analytics—the buzzwords pile up quickly. But Axente thinks most companies are focusing on the wrong trends.

"The real trend, I would say, is human resonance," she noted. "I see marketing sitting casually in between business and art. And if that's the case, the output of marketing has to resonate with us, with humans."

Here's the uncomfortable reality: we're entering an era where AI can pump out enormous volumes of content. "It's a bit intimidating to see how much synthetic content the internet has at the moment, and we're only just getting started. But you know what? It's only us who can create meaning."

The critical question becomes: how do you use AI to deepen authenticity rather than dilute it? "And that's the theme I love unpacking in keynotes because when leaders get this, their marketing changes entirely," Axente said.

What AI Is Doing to Our Kids

Perhaps nowhere are the stakes higher than in Axente's work on AI and children's rights. The impact, she says, couldn't be more profound.

"What we're seeing is that AI as a phenomenon is reshaping their identity, relationships, learning, even self-worth. It's enough to look at how the younger generation interacts with social media and how much time they're spending online."

Through her collaborations with UNICEF and other organizations, she's encountered research showing just how embedded digital platforms have become in children's lives. "And this reshaping happens quietly. These kids didn't choose the algorithm or the platform, and they can't control it. They have no agency."

That's why ethics in AI for children matters so intensely. "Because we're not just building tech for today, we're also encoding norms for the next generation. If we get this wrong, they will be the ones to pay the price. And that is my mission and my passion. I advocate for education, policy, and cultural awareness every single time I speak, with a focus on AI for children."

The Message That Matters Most

When people walk out of Axente's keynotes, what does she most want them to take with them?

"That we have agency and we have control," she said. "And I think this is what's not as clear when you open the newspaper and read the latest interview of a tech guru. AI isn't something out there. It's in the systems we use, the decisions we make, the culture we shape."

Her goal is for people to leave not just informed, but activated and empowered. "To know that we still have control on our side over how we use AI to work for us."

And for companies ready to move beyond just talking about it? "That's where responsible intelligence comes in. Because this isn't just a keynote. It's a movement on how to make AI work for us as individuals and as a collective."

This interview with Maria Luciana Axente was conducted by Tabish Ali of The Champions Speakers Agency.