Article 5 of 6 in our 2025 Broadley Series Smarter Content: How AI Fits into the Future of Production

In our first three articles, we looked at how avatars can help streamline your production without compromising your message, how to brief AI tools, and how to use AI to create content across multiple formats.

In the last article, we showed how AI supports Virtual Production by helping clients preview sets, lighting and camera angles before stepping on stage.

This time, we’re cutting through the hype to look at something less glamorous but far more important: The Ecosystem.

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Key Takeaways

– Fix the foundation before anything else: AI can’t magically clean up every mess. Before you do anything, map out the existing workflow, so your system actually functions logically.

– People‑first, tech‑second: Involve your team from the very start to help shape the workflow with you.

– Being reactive is often chaotic: Replace chaotic feedback loops with specific checkpoints. Define who owns what and when, and when feedback is expected.

– Human oversight is crucial: AI is much more like an assistant, so it shouldn’t run unsupervised or on autopilot. You will still need to be very much involved throughout.

– Measure meaningful outcomes: AI doesn’t automatically equal success. Decide what metrics matter to you, track them closely and let data guide your next steps.

– Integrate tech intentionally: Don’t bolt it on. AI must slot into a strong, well-defined chain to work best.

AI Is Not the Tool:  It Is Only as Good as the Workflow Behind It

If you’re using AI to edit, subtitle, translate or reformat content, you’ll know it can be fast. But without the right system around it, that speed creates chaos.

AI isn’t a shortcut. It’s one part of a bigger system. And if the rest of your production setup can’t keep up, the AI tool ends up sitting there, underused, misused or abandoned completely.

As many of us have now learned, AI only works when everything around it works too.

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The Real Issue: Not the Tool, But the Structure

When people say “AI didn’t work for us,” it’s rarely because the tool itself failed. More often, it’s due to unclear expectations, bad timing or disjointed workflows.

Maybe the files weren’t labelled properly. Maybe the team didn’t know how to check the output. Maybe the platform required a subscription no one renewed. Or maybe the AI did its job, but there was no one available to approve or refine the result.

The outcome? Delays, frustration and one more shortcut gathering algorithmic dust in the digital graveyard of unused apps.

What a Real AI-Ready Workflow Looks Like

Here’s what we’ve built at Broadley to make AI tools deliver reliably:

– Planned outputs from the start: We ensure that all format planning starts in pre-production. This means careful framing, clear slating and solid metadata, so whatever tech comes next, it can pick up smoothly.

– Clean file management: File names, folders and audio tracks are properly structured before they hit the AI tool. Garbage in equals garbage out, so we avoid garbage.

– Human checkpoints: No AI output is final without a human pass. We scan for cropping errors, subtitle mistakes or awkward timing, and tweak it fast.

– Hardware and software alignment: Our cameras, post pipeline and delivery platforms are all linked. If the AI tool generates a vertical cut, we can route that straight to post.

– Trained team: Everyone in our workflow knows where the AI fits in, when to use it, and how to quality check the result. It’s not about technical wizardry, just shared process.

This setup means we can move fast without sacrificing quality or losing track of where things are.

What Happens When That’s Missing?

We’ve worked with brands who tried to bolt AI into old workflows. It always ends the same way. People blame the tech, but the real problem is disorganisation.

It’s like buying a top-end camera without batteries, lenses or storage. You’ve got the tool, but not the system to make it work.

AI needs infrastructure. Not just cables and kit, but process, training and time.

AI is Part of the Team, Not the Team

At Broadley, we don’t treat AI as a magic bullet. We treat it like an intern who’s lightning fast, needs supervision, and works best when surrounded by experienced professionals.

Used this way, AI is transformative. It allows our team to do more, faster, and more affordably. But it’s never the answer on its own.

We still make the creative calls. We still check the timing, tweak the captions, or add a human touch that connects with real audiences.

The tool speeds you up. The team brings it home.

For Brands, Marketers and Producers

If you’re planning to use AI in your next campaign or shoot, here’s what to think about:

– Who’s managing the workflow from shoot to post?

– Does your team know how to use the specific AI tools you’re implementing?

– Are there checkpoints before content goes live, and is someone accountable for each stage?

– Can you reliably deliver content across multiple formats, without duplication or delay?

We help our clients build that thinking in from day one. Because when AI is set up right, it removes noise and frees up time. But when it’s dropped in as an afterthought, it creates more problems than it solves.

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Coming Up Next in the Series

In Article 6, we’re going to take a hard look at where AI still falls short, and why human oversight still matters. It’s easy to get caught up in the speed. But the best results come from knowing where to pause, adjust and think.

FAQ: Workflows Are King, Not AI

So, can AI just fix our broken or non-existent workflow?

Not really. AI only becomes transformative when built on a foundation that works, where people lead, structure guides, and metrics measure. Skip that, and AI is really just a load of noise.

– We don’t have time to redesign everything, should we still use AI? Yes. A small workflow tweak often saves more time than a big AI rollout. Start by streamlining one step at a time, not overhauling the whole thing.

– Isn’t this just project management in disguise? Sort of, but so much more. It’s all about designing workflows that reduce noise and increase clarity and focus, leaving your team to do their job smarter.

– How do I know if my workflow’s broken? Typically, there will be duplication, unclear feedback etc. These are a good indication that something has gone wrong.

– What’s the role of your team in all this? Central. They live the workflow daily, so build improvements with them, not around them. Your aim is fewer fixes, not more meetings.

– So when should you bring in AI? Once your workflow runs smoothly and your goals are measurable.

– Will AI ever completely replace parts of our creative process? Maybe one day. At the moment, it’s a tool, not a replacement.

AI will only accelerate whatever’s already happening, good or bad. If your process and workflow are messy, AI will just help you make mistakes faster. Broadley Studios is here to help you design the perfect workflow for your shoot so you can get the best out of the latest AI tools available.

AI Is Not the Tool: The Workflow Behind It Is