Grayline Group, a strategic advisory firm specializing in AI strategy, cybersecurity, and technology program management for defense and critical infrastructure, has launched its Applied Intelligence practice. The new service line integrates AI strategy and implementation with the firm's proprietary Catalyst framework, a methodology for managing disruptive change developed by President Joseph Kopser and Partner Bret Boyd in their book Catalyst.
While AI tools have become widespread, Grayline Group identifies a persistent gap between AI capability and organizational readiness. 'AI is the defining catalyst of our era, but it remains a leadership problem, not a technology problem,' said Joseph Kopser, President of Grayline Group and co-author of Catalyst. 'We aren't just deploying models. We are helping leaders rebuild organizational assumptions so that AI generates durable value—not just pilot projects.'
The Catalyst framework, originally developed through Grayline Group's work with transit agencies, defense contractors, and municipal governments, now anchors the firm's AI strategy engagements. Services include AI Readiness Assessment and Organizational Diagnostics, Governance and Ethical Framework Design, Workforce Alignment and Change Management, and Outcome Measurement and ROI Architecture.
Grayline Group's Applied Intelligence practice is backed by operational credibility across sectors where failure is not theoretical. The firm's current portfolio includes cybersecurity program management for what will be the first fully autonomous public transit network in the United States, AI-enabled manufacturing supply chain optimization through portfolio company Sustainment, and strategic advisory for organizations navigating the intersection of AI, policy, and national security.
Coinciding with the Applied Intelligence launch, Grayline Group has rebuilt its digital headquarters from the ground up. The redesigned platform features the firm's four core service areas—AI Strategy & Implementation, Technology Program Management, Cybersecurity & Risk, and Intelligence & Decision Support—alongside the Grayline Insights blog, which houses published analysis on applied AI, defense innovation, and organizational change.
Kopser detailed the firm's strategic rationale in a recent essay on the Grayline Insights blog, framing the shift as the natural evolution of the Catalyst thesis: 'The organizations that will capture durable value from AI aren't the ones rushing to deploy the latest model. They're the ones doing the harder work: governance, workforce readiness, and rigorous outcome measurement.'


