Frontline managers are the leverage point of every sales organization. Yet, we continue to bury them in administrative debt.
We hire them to coach. We force them to forecast. We ask them to develop talent, but we drown them in dashboard reviews. This is not a recipe for growth. It is a recipe for burnout.
At the 2025 Q4 Enablement Growth Forum, we sat down with Hugh Robbins, Blackbaud’s SaaS Sales and Enablement Leader, and Stacey Unck, Director of Sales Enablement at MasterControl, to strip away the hype around artificial intelligence (AI) and focus on the reality.
The consensus was clear: AI is not just about productivity, AI is architectural change.
Most organizations are stuck at Level 1 or 2 of AI maturity. They are using tools to summarize emails. The leaders are using tools to orchestrate revenue. And here is how the best in the business is closing the gap.
1. Stop Creating Admins. Start Building “AI Architects”.
Research shows that managers spend the majority of their week on low-value tasks. They are data entry clerks with expensive titles.
We promoted them to coach. We pay them to strategize. But we force them to spend their days scrubbing CRM data and chasing forecast updates.
The goal of AI implementation is not to help managers type faster. It is to free them to do the one thing software cannot do: Lead.
What enablement needs to do:
We need to stop asking managers to report the news. We need to equip them to make the news.
2. Adoption Is Not IT’s Job. It Is Yours.
A common failure mode in AI rollout is the "Field of Dreams" strategy: Buy the license, distribute the login, and hope they use it.
Hope is not a strategy.
During the forum, we polled the room. Most organizations are hovering in the early stages of maturity (Level 1 or 2). The tools are available, but the utilization is shallow. As discussed during our session, you cannot email your way to adoption. You need a change agent.
What enablement needs to do:
If your managers are only using AI to summarize emails, you are leaving revenue on the table.
3. The Blueprint: How Blackbaud Built the “Super-Manager”
Marketing would never launch a campaign without tracking. Sales should never launch a deal without data.
4. Practice Should Not Be a Cost Center
What enablement needs to do:
Confidence is not built through observation but through repetition. Hence why AI makes repetition scalable.
The Era of Experimentation Is Over
The gap between the "haves" and "have-nots" in sales enablement is widening. The "haves" are treating AI as a strategic teammate. They are building custom agents, automating roleplay, and turning managers into architects of revenue.
The "have-nots" are still trying to figure out how to write a prompt. The tools are here. The playbooks are written. The only variable left is execution.
If you are waiting for a perfect roadmap, you are already behind. Don't guess where you stand, measure it.