🔍
Press Esc to close • Ctrl+K to open

Lead Your Team with AI: From Employee to Decision-Maker

Everyone today learns to use AI; leaders learn to lead with it. In six practical lessons you shift from a task-executor to a decision-maker who deploys AI as a strategic partner: breaking down goals, supporting decisions with weighted-criteria tables, elevated leadership communication, PMO-grade project management, and measuring impact with smart KPIs. Real Saudi examples, before/after comparisons, and a live exercise in every lesson that ends with a real output you can copy and use tomorrow.

Lessons: 6 Completed: 0/6 Path: Progressive
🧪 Hands-on lab, in-page
🤖 Try prompts on a real AI
🎓 Shareable certificate
🎯 Focused, no fluff
Leadership Skills

AI in Decision Support: Weighted Criteria and Devil's Advocate

Not a course in "how to use the tool" — but in "how to lead with it." For supervisors, team leads, project managers, and those aiming for promotion.

🎉

Well done! You completed the course

You mastered practical, high-value skills and applied them on real tools. Your certificate is ready — claim it and share it.

🎓 Get your certificate

The hardest moments of leadership are choosing among options each of which has merit. Intuition alone deceives. The professional decision does not rely on "feeling"; it subjects options to clear, weighted criteria. AI turns this methodology from heavy theory into a table you build in minutes.

The weight is not a technical detail; it is an expression of your strategy. The AI builds the table and computes, but choosing the weights is a pure leadership decision that stays in your hands.

Check Your Understanding (2 questions)

Question 1

In a weighted-criteria table, what remains a pure leadership decision in the leader's hands?

💡 Why: Correct. Computation is mechanical and the AI excels at it, but the weight declares what deserves emphasis in your strategy. That judgment is leadership and is not delegated.
Question 2

Why does a wise leader ask the AI to play devil's advocate against his preferred decision?

💡 Why: Correct. Confirmation bias makes us see only what supports us. Asking the tool to build the strongest case against you stress-tests the decision safely before the market or your boss does so harshly.
The recommended next step unlocks only after the correct answer, and your progress is saved on this device.