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Guided AB-731 Domain 3
Domain 3 — Module 4 of 6 67%
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AB-731 Study Guide

Domain 1: Identify the Business Value of Generative AI Solutions

  • Generative AI vs Traditional AI: What's the Difference?
  • Choosing the Right AI Solution for Your Business
  • AI Models: Pretrained vs Fine-Tuned
  • AI Cost Drivers and ROI: Tokens, Pricing, and Business Cases
  • Challenges of Generative AI: Fabrications, Bias & Reliability
  • When Generative AI Creates Real Business Value
  • Prompt Engineering: The Skill That Multiplies AI Value
  • RAG and Grounding: Making AI Use YOUR Data
  • Data Quality: The Make-or-Break Factor for AI
  • When Traditional Machine Learning Adds Value
  • Securing AI Systems: From Application to Data

Domain 2: Identify Benefits, Capabilities, and Opportunities for Microsoft AI Apps and Services

  • Mapping Business Needs to Microsoft AI Solutions
  • Copilot Versions: Free, Business, M365, and Beyond
  • Copilot Chat: Web, Mobile & Work Experiences
  • Copilot in M365 Apps: Word, Excel, Teams & More
  • Copilot Studio & Microsoft Graph: Building Smarter Solutions
  • Researcher & Analyst: Copilot's Power Agents
  • Build, Buy, or Extend: The AI Decision Framework
  • Microsoft Foundry: Your AI Platform
  • Azure AI Services: Vision, Search & Beyond
  • Matching the Right AI Model to Your Business Need

Domain 3: Identify an Implementation and Adoption Strategy

  • Responsible AI and Governance: Principles That Protect Your Business Free
  • Setting Up an AI Council: Strategy, Oversight & Alignment Free
  • Building Your AI Adoption Team Free
  • AI Champions: Your Secret Weapon for Adoption Free
  • Data, Security, Privacy & Cost: The Four Pillars of AI Readiness Free
  • Copilot & Azure AI Licensing: Every Option Explained Free

AB-731 Study Guide

Domain 1: Identify the Business Value of Generative AI Solutions

  • Generative AI vs Traditional AI: What's the Difference?
  • Choosing the Right AI Solution for Your Business
  • AI Models: Pretrained vs Fine-Tuned
  • AI Cost Drivers and ROI: Tokens, Pricing, and Business Cases
  • Challenges of Generative AI: Fabrications, Bias & Reliability
  • When Generative AI Creates Real Business Value
  • Prompt Engineering: The Skill That Multiplies AI Value
  • RAG and Grounding: Making AI Use YOUR Data
  • Data Quality: The Make-or-Break Factor for AI
  • When Traditional Machine Learning Adds Value
  • Securing AI Systems: From Application to Data

Domain 2: Identify Benefits, Capabilities, and Opportunities for Microsoft AI Apps and Services

  • Mapping Business Needs to Microsoft AI Solutions
  • Copilot Versions: Free, Business, M365, and Beyond
  • Copilot Chat: Web, Mobile & Work Experiences
  • Copilot in M365 Apps: Word, Excel, Teams & More
  • Copilot Studio & Microsoft Graph: Building Smarter Solutions
  • Researcher & Analyst: Copilot's Power Agents
  • Build, Buy, or Extend: The AI Decision Framework
  • Microsoft Foundry: Your AI Platform
  • Azure AI Services: Vision, Search & Beyond
  • Matching the Right AI Model to Your Business Need

Domain 3: Identify an Implementation and Adoption Strategy

  • Responsible AI and Governance: Principles That Protect Your Business Free
  • Setting Up an AI Council: Strategy, Oversight & Alignment Free
  • Building Your AI Adoption Team Free
  • AI Champions: Your Secret Weapon for Adoption Free
  • Data, Security, Privacy & Cost: The Four Pillars of AI Readiness Free
  • Copilot & Azure AI Licensing: Every Option Explained Free
Domain 3: Identify an Implementation and Adoption Strategy Free ⏱ ~11 min read

AI Champions: Your Secret Weapon for Adoption

Champions are peer advocates who accelerate AI adoption from the inside. Learn how to build, run, and measure a champions program that drives real usage.

What are AI champions?

☕ Simple explanation

Champions are the people in your office who get excited about AI and help everyone else get excited too.

Imagine you just got a new phone feature. Would you rather learn about it from a 50-page manual or from a colleague who says “Hey, look at this cool trick I found”? That colleague is a champion.

Champions aren’t IT support. They’re regular employees who use AI in their daily work, share tips with their teammates, and help people who are stuck. They make AI feel approachable, not scary.

AI champions are peer advocates embedded across the organisation who accelerate adoption through influence, not authority. They are typically enthusiastic early adopters who volunteer (or are nominated) to support their colleagues in learning and using AI tools effectively.

Champions bridge the gap between the formal adoption team and everyday users. Research consistently shows that peer influence is more effective than top-down mandates for driving technology adoption. People trust advice from colleagues who do the same job more than guidance from IT or corporate training.

A champions program formalises this peer influence into a structured, supported, and measurable initiative.

Champions vs IT support

This distinction matters for the exam. Champions and IT support serve different functions.

Champions drive cultural adoption. IT support drives technical reliability.
FeatureFocusWhen they helpHow they help
AI championsCultural adoption — making AI part of how people workDaily workflow: 'How can I use AI for this report?'Peer coaching, tips, demonstrations, prompt sharing, encouragement
IT supportTechnical function — making AI tools work correctlyTechnical problems: 'Copilot isn't loading in my Teams'Troubleshooting, access provisioning, configuration, bug escalation

A champion might show a colleague how to use Copilot to draft a project update. IT support fixes the issue when Copilot doesn’t appear in someone’s Word ribbon. Both are essential, but they’re different roles.

💡 Exam tip: Champions are about CULTURE, not TECH

If an exam question describes a user struggling with how to USE AI effectively, the answer involves champions. If the user has a technical problem (installation, access, errors), the answer involves IT support. Champions handle the “how do I get value from this?” questions.

Building a champions program

Step 1: Select champions

Not everyone is the right fit. Look for people who are:

  • Enthusiastic about AI (genuine interest, not just compliant)
  • Respected by peers (their advice carries weight)
  • Diverse in role, location, and department (represent the whole organisation)
  • Willing to invest time (2-4 hours per week alongside their regular job)

Avoid selecting only the most technical people. The best champions are often non-technical employees who have found practical ways to use AI in their daily work. Their stories are more relatable.

Step 2: Train champions

Champions need deeper knowledge than regular users:

Training areaWhat champions learn
Advanced promptingTechniques beyond basics — chaining, few-shot examples, context setting
Use case discoveryHow to identify AI opportunities in any workflow
Responsible AI principlesSo they can answer ethics questions from colleagues
Common objectionsHow to respond to “AI makes mistakes” and “I don’t trust it”
Escalation pathsWhen to refer issues to IT support vs the adoption team

Step 3: Define responsibilities

Clear expectations prevent champions from burning out or doing too little.

What champions do:

  • Hold weekly or fortnightly “AI office hours” for their team
  • Share a prompt or tip of the week via Teams or email
  • Run short showcase sessions (“Look what I did with Copilot this week”)
  • Collect feedback from colleagues and relay it to the adoption team
  • Report adoption blockers they observe on the ground

What champions do NOT do:

  • Provide IT support (they redirect technical issues)
  • Force people to use AI (they inspire, not mandate)
  • Spend more than 10-15% of their work time on champion activities

Step 4: Recognise and reward

Champions are volunteering their time. Recognition keeps them motivated.

  • Visible recognition: Mention champions in company meetings, newsletters, or leadership updates
  • Exclusive access: Give champions early access to new AI features or tools
  • Career development: Champion experience looks great on a CV — highlight it in performance reviews
  • Community: Create a champions Teams channel for peer support, idea sharing, and camaraderie
  • Small rewards: Swag, lunch vouchers, or conference tickets for top contributors

Rollout mechanics

Office hours

Champions hold regular drop-in sessions where colleagues can bring real work problems and get live help using AI.

Format: 30-minute sessions, weekly or fortnightly. No agenda — bring whatever you’re working on. The champion demonstrates how AI can help in real time.

Why it works: People learn best when they see AI applied to THEIR work, not generic demos.

Showcase sessions

Monthly 15-minute presentations where champions share real wins: “Here’s how I used Copilot to cut my weekly reporting from 3 hours to 30 minutes.”

Why it works: Social proof. When colleagues see a peer — someone with the same job — getting real value, they’re motivated to try.

Prompt libraries

Champions contribute to a shared prompt library — a collection of proven prompts organised by role and task.

Why it works: Removes the “blank page” problem. New users don’t have to invent prompts from scratch.

Measuring champion program success

MetricWhat it tells youTarget
Active AI usersAre more people actually using AI tools?Month-over-month increase in teams with a champion
Usage frequencyAre users coming back after trying AI once?Weekly active users as a percentage of total licensed
Champion engagementAre champions staying active and motivated?80%+ of champions hosting at least one activity per month
User satisfactionDo users find AI helpful in their work?Survey scores improving quarter over quarter
Support ticket reductionAre champions deflecting “how to” questions from IT?Fewer basic AI queries hitting the help desk
ℹ️ The champion-adoption correlation

Organisations with active champion programs consistently see 2-3x higher AI adoption rates in teams with champions compared to teams without. The champion effect is strongest in the first 90 days after deployment — the critical window when users either build habits or abandon the tool.

Scenario: Tomás’s 50-champion program at PacificSteel

🔄 Tomás needs to drive Copilot adoption across 5,000 workers in 12 factories and head office. He builds a champion program with a target ratio of 1 champion per 100 employees = 50 champions.

Selection: Tomás asks factory supervisors and department heads to nominate people who are “curious about technology and respected by their teams.” He gets 70 nominations and selects 50 based on diversity of role, location, and shift pattern.

Training: A two-day intensive (Day 1: advanced Copilot skills + responsible AI. Day 2: facilitation skills + objection handling). Then monthly 1-hour refresher sessions.

Rollout:

  • Week 1-2: Champions use Copilot themselves. Build personal experience.
  • Week 3-4: Champions start office hours in their teams.
  • Month 2: First showcase sessions. Champions share early wins.
  • Month 3+: Prompt library grows organically. Champions identify new use cases.

Recognition: Tomás creates a “Champion of the Month” award, shared in the company newsletter. Champions get branded mugs and early access to new AI features. The COO thanks champions by name in quarterly town halls.

Results at 6 months:

  • Teams WITH champions: 72% weekly active Copilot users
  • Teams WITHOUT champions: 28% weekly active Copilot users
  • Champion-supported teams found 3x more use cases

Key flashcards

Question

What is an AI champion?

Click or press Enter to reveal answer

Answer

A peer advocate embedded in the organisation who accelerates AI adoption through influence, not authority. Champions are enthusiastic users who coach colleagues, share tips, run office hours, and make AI feel approachable.

Click to flip back

Question

How are AI champions different from IT support?

Click or press Enter to reveal answer

Answer

Champions handle cultural adoption ('How can I use AI for my report?'). IT support handles technical issues ('Copilot isn't loading'). Champions drive USAGE through peer coaching. IT support drives RELIABILITY through troubleshooting.

Click to flip back

Question

What are the four steps to building a champions program?

Click or press Enter to reveal answer

Answer

1. Select champions (enthusiastic, respected, diverse, willing). 2. Train them (advanced skills, responsible AI, objection handling). 3. Define responsibilities (office hours, tips, showcases, feedback collection). 4. Recognise and reward (visibility, exclusive access, career development).

Click to flip back

Knowledge check

Knowledge Check

One of TomĂĄs's factory floor AI champions gets a question from a user: 'Copilot isn't appearing in my Word toolbar.' What should the champion do?

Knowledge Check

TomĂĄs observes that teams with AI champions have 72% weekly active users while teams without champions have only 28%. What does this demonstrate?

🎬 Video coming soon

Next up: Data, Security, Privacy and Cost — the four pillars every leader must assess before deploying AI.

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