Skip to content

Canada's Business and Tech Newsroom

  • Professional Subscription
  • Partnerships & Advertising
  • Licensing & Syndication
Log In Subscribe
Welcome,
  • My Account
  • Log Out
  • Business
  • Tech
  • National
  • The Big Read
  • Briefings
  • Commentary
Search
Log In Subscribe
Welcome,
  • My Account
  • Log Out
News

Canadian businesses need a little motivation to adopt AI, executives say

TORONTO — Widespread AI adoption could help Canada ride the waves of economic and geopolitical turbulence roiling the world, but businesses and governments both need to get on board, executives said at an event in Toronto on Thursday.

News

Canadian businesses need a little motivation to adopt AI, executives say

At a Western University event, business leaders called for more public education about the technology’s benefits—and more government support to get companies using it

By Murad Hemmadi
Michael Pelosi, Canada country manager of Cohere, speaks at an event on AI adoption that Western University’s Lawrence National Centre for Policy and Management hosted in Toronto on Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025. Photo: Handout/Lawrence National Centre for Policy and Management
Sep 19, 2025
A A
A Small A Medium A Large
Share

Gift

Share

TORONTO — Widespread AI adoption could help Canada ride the waves of economic and geopolitical turbulence roiling the world, but businesses and governments both need to get on board, executives said at an event in Toronto on Thursday.

The knowledge: Post-ChatGPT, “there was this idea that, ‘Once I have [AI], it will work,’” said Michael Pelosi, Canada country manager of Cohere. “But you also need the motivation to use it.” 

Pelosi was speaking at an event in Toronto focused on AI adoption put on by Western University’s Lawrence National Centre for Policy and Management featuring executives from major firms.

Legal and compliance risks have slowed businesses’ adoption of AI, Pelosi said. Firms that run pilots with the technology have typically restricted them to small departments, and kept large language models (LLMs) and other AI tools away from their clients. 

Studies have found that Canadians have particularly low trust in AI. More public education about how the technology works and what it’s capable of could help alleviate those worries, and once consumers get comfortable, businesses will follow, Pelosi said.

Related Articles

A side-angle shot of Julien Billot at a lectern. There is a large video monitor in the background displaying Scale AI's blue-and-white logo.

Speeding up generative AI adoption worth tens of billions to Canada, analysis projects

By Murad Hemmadi
The exterior of a building displays the Manulife logo and name above a row of windows.

Big businesses are creating their own tests to find the best AI models

By Murad Hemmadi

Executives at Thursday’s event also dismissed an MIT study that found 95 per cent of corporate pilots using generative AI pilots produced no return. They insisted their firms are already feeling and measuring the benefits of the technology. Bank of Montreal requires that any new applications of the technology generate one basis point—a hundredth of a percentage point—of improvement in the firm’s revenue or costs, said Kristin Milchanowski, the bank’s chief AI and data officer. “We’ve been effectively using AI very successfully.”

The backdrop: AI and other digital technologies will form the basis of a fourth industrial revolution, former Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz said. That will produce stock market bubbles and crashes, rising income inequality and the rise of political populism and polarization. The trade war touched off by the Trump administration’s tariffs is also a drag on economic growth, he said. 

Canada has “lagged other countries in this productivity game,” Poloz said, but AI can help close the gap. “Facilitate it, speed it up in every way that we can,” he said.

The public sector: Lots of panellists called for Canadian governments to do more to incentivize AI adoption, starting with their own operations. The public sector should “lead the way and actually buy this stuff,” Poloz said, also calling for financial and tax incentives to get companies using AI tools.

Ottawa is listening, senior federal officials said at the event. The federal government plans to overhaul its procurement system as part of its new AI strategy for the public service, said Kara Beckles, executive director for privacy and AI policy at the Treasury Board Secretariat, adding that right now, “we have the exact same process for buying a helicopter as we do for buying an LLM.” Government contracts give companies a “cash infusion into their technologies,” but also a big-name customer they can use to sell to other clients, Beckles said.

Bell Business Markets president John Watson said the government should become “an anchor tenant” for Canadian companies building AI data centres, and encourage businesses to use homegrown compute over foreign cloud services. “It’s not easy to go and build a sovereign stack,” he said. Bell recently announced major data centre building plans, and is working with Cohere to sell AI tools to businesses and governments.

The counterpoint: Canadian tech firms have long complained about the difficulty of selling to the public sector. But startups shouldn’t be chasing government customers in the early stages of their growth, because they don’t generate enough revenue to justify all the work needed to service them, said Dayforce CEO David Ossip. He was speaking Thursday at a different event just down the street, put on by the Council of Canadian Innovators for a crowd of CEOs from prominent Canadian scale-ups.

Gift the full article

Dayforce, which is going big on AI, recently landed a major contract to replace the payroll system for the federal public service. “You have to get a certain scale before you start to work with government,” Ossip said. 

Instead of procurement, he called for policymakers to offer tax credits for Canadian companies to buy Canadian technology. “Everyone inside the room here should be buying everyone else’s products,” Ossip told the audience.

#artificial intelligence #BMO #Cohere #Dayforce #digital government #economy #markets #Stephen Poloz #Tech

Loading...

Thanks for sharing!

You have shared 5 articles this month and reached the maximum amount of shares available.

Close
This account has reached its share limit.

If you would like to purchase a sharing license please contact The Logic support at [email protected].

Close
Want to share this article?

Upgrade to all-access now

Close
Gift the full article!

You have gifted 0 article(s) this month and have 5 remaining.

Copy link and gift
Copy Link
Email to a friend
Send Email
Gift on Social Media

Recipients will be able to read the full text of the article after submitting their email address. They will not have access to other articles or subscriber benefits.

Photo: Handout/Lawrence National Centre for Policy and Management

Most Popular This Week

A shot of a placard on a table reading "Let Alberta Decide." There is a person out of focus in the foreground wearing a cowboy hat.
The Big Read

What Alberta’s corporate heavyweights really think about separation

By Meghan Potkins
Carney and Trump at a photo op in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt, against a white backdrop that features a peace-themed logo for the gathering. Carney is leaning toward a scowling Trump and pointing his index finger at the U.S. president.
News

The U.S. has chosen not to extend CUSMA. Here’s what happens next

By Joanna Smith
A person in glasses and a blue top is sitting and typing on a laptop in an office. A desktop screen next to the laptop displays some blurred-out coding work.
News

A niche white-collar role is becoming the AI industry’s hot new job

By Anita Balakrishnan
A logo that reads AI in blue lettering against a light yellow background.
News

What happened when a VC firm let AI do almost everything

By Catherine McIntyre

In-depth, agenda-setting reporting

Great journalism delivered straight to your inbox.

Nakisa CEO Babak Varjavandi in a screencapture from the floor of a tech show. He's wearing a suit jacket and open-collared shirt.
News

Canadian firms are ready to help with digital sovereignty. Their challenge is getting approved

By Laura Osman

Briefing

MDA Space to buy control of French Earth-observation company for $920M

By David Reevely   |   Jul 8, 2026 | 5:58 PM ET

Meta officially unveils a $13B data-centre facility in Alberta

By Meghan Potkins   |   Jul 8, 2026

U of T and McMaster are anchoring a $40M life-sciences fund

By Catherine McIntyre   |   Jul 8, 2026

Best business newsletter in Canada

Get up to speed in minutes with insights and analysis on the most important stories of the day, every weekday.

Exclusive events

See the bigger picture with reporters and industry experts in subscriber-exclusive events.

Membership in The Logic Council

Membership provides access to our popular Slack channel, participation in subscriber surveys and invitations to exclusive events with our journalists and special guests.

Recent Popular Stories

The Big Read

What Alberta’s corporate heavyweights really think about separation

By Meghan Potkins   |   Jul 2, 2026
A shot of a placard on a table reading "Let Alberta Decide." There is a person out of focus in the foreground wearing a cowboy hat.
News

A niche white-collar role is becoming the AI industry’s hot new job

By Anita Balakrishnan   |   Jun 30, 2026
A person in glasses and a blue top is sitting and typing on a laptop in an office. A desktop screen next to the laptop displays some blurred-out coding work.
News

What happened when a VC firm let AI do almost everything

By Catherine McIntyre   |   Jun 29, 2026
A logo that reads AI in blue lettering against a light yellow background.
News

Carney’s new deal for B.C. paves way for West Coast pipeline

By David Reevely and Meghan Potkins   |   Jul 2, 2026
Workers position pipe during construction of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion in Abbotsford, B.C., in May 2023.
Analysis

Canada’s ETF industry is almost a trillion-dollar business

By Chaimae Chouiekh   |   Jul 3, 2026
Despite a down year a sign board displays the TSX's upbeat close on the final day of the year, in Toronto's financial district on Monday, Dec. 31, 2018.
Analysis

It turns out Trump does need something from Canada—aluminum

By Joanna Smith   |   Jun 25, 2026
A close-up of a made-in-Canada stamp on the end of a cylindrical piece of raw aluminum.

Canada's most influential executives and policymakers are reading The Logic

  • CPP Investments
  • Sun Life Financial
  • C100
  • Amazon
  • Telus
  • Mastercard
  • bdc
  • Shopify
  • Rogers
  • RBC
  • General Motors
  • MaRS
  • Government of Canada
  • Uber
  • Loblaw Companies Limited
logic-logo

Canada's Business and Tech Newsroom

100% human-crafted journalism

Newsroom

  • News Tips
  • AI Policy
  • Editorial Disclosures
  • Story Pitches

Company

  • About Us
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Statement
  • Corporate Information

Contact

  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • FAQs
  • Work at The Logic

© 2026 The Logic Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Trusted by leaders

Error

Account creation failed.

Please email us at [email protected].

Create Account

[wppb-register form_name=”cozmo-registration-form-for-modal”]

I do have an account
Login
or

[wppb-login]

I don’t have an account