PMI-CPMAI emphasizes that AI projects typically involve uncertainty, experimentation, and evolving requirements. Data can change, model behavior must be tuned, and stakeholders may refine success criteria as they see early results. Because of this, PMI frames AI work as well-suited to adaptive/agile approaches that support short iterations, continuous learning, and rapid feedback loops.
In an adaptive/agile approach, the team plans in smaller increments, regularly reprioritizes the backlog, and refines scope based on empirical evidence from model experiments and pilots. This allows them to update features, retrain models, and adjust data or architecture as new insights are gained. PMI-CPMAI links this directly to AI lifecycles, where experimentation, evaluation, and deployment are repeated cycles rather than one-off phases.
Predictive approaches are more rigid and assume stable, knowable requirements upfront, which is rarely realistic for AI behavior and data-driven insights. Incremental and hybrid can add some flexibility, but adaptive/agile is the explicit choice in PMI’s guidance when iterative improvement and changing requirements are primary concerns. Therefore, the most effective approach for an AI solution deployment in this context is adaptive/agile.