Artificial intelligence (AI) is changing how facilities are managed, maintained and optimised. For many organisations, AI marks a shift from reactive work towards proactive, data-driven operations. But to apply it effectively, teams need a clear understanding of what AI is, how it works and the foundation needed before adoption can take place.
Although interest in AI is high, adoption is still early. FacilitiesNet reports that in a 2024 JLL survey, 59% of organisations did not yet have a formal AI strategy. At the same time, early adopters were already seeing measurable results. Deloitte found that predictive maintenance programmes can increase uptime by 10 to 20% and speed up planning cycles by 20 to 50%. These early outcomes show why facilities leaders are exploring AI more seriously and why understanding the fundamentals, data requirements and use cases is essential before getting started.
This guide explains the fundamentals of AI in facilities management, how to prepare your data and systems, the potential ROI and the emerging technologies shaping its future.
AI in facilities management refers to the use of advanced algorithms and data models to analyse large volumes of information from building systems, assets and operations. The goal is to provide facilities teams with clear, actionable insights and recommendations so teams are free to focus on their more pressing tasks, while also improving long-term ROI decisions.
By processing data in real time, AI delivers significant value to facilities teams that are often understaffed or lack dedicated data analysts. It can identify patterns, detect anomalies and surface recommendations that help teams make faster, more informed decisions, ultimately improving efficiency, reliability and overall performance.
JLL’s research challenges the popular belief that AI is a “leapfrog” technology. Many leaders hope AI will let organisations with outdated systems skip gradual upgrades and move straight to advanced capabilities. Instead, JLL finds that AI is widening the gap between digital leaders and laggards. Companies that already have strong, modern technology foundations are achieving superior AI outcomes, while those with legacy systems are falling further behind.
Complementary research reinforces why this gap is growing. Organisations that invest in strengthening their data foundations are able to better leverage AI tools and translate them into measurable results, including maintenance cost reductions of nearly 25% and energy savings of around 20%. Together, these findings show that AI success depends less on leapfrogging and more on building the right data and technology foundations first.
AI delivers the strongest ROI when it is aligned with organisational priorities. Because facilities teams often face multiple challenges at once, it is important to define what matters most before choosing a solution.
If your primary goal is to reduce administrative time, look for tools that automate data entry, reporting and work order organisation. If unexpected downtime is your biggest concern, prioritise predictive maintenance capabilities. If sustainability goals are a growing focus for leadership, AI that improves energy performance may offer the best return.
These benefits depend on having reliable, consistent data. AI can only make useful recommendations when the information behind it is complete and accurate, which is why a strong data foundation plays such an important role in achieving ROI.
To build a strong business case, facilities leaders should focus on three essentials:
When these pieces are in place, AI can scale efficiently and deliver sustainable value.
The next phase of AI in facilities management is moving from individual use cases to more connected, intelligent operations. As data quality and integration improve, several AI-powered technologies are creating new opportunities for efficiency, insights, and automation.
Organisations that invest in connected data, training and governance can use these AI capabilities to shift from reactive management to proactive, continuously optimised operations.
AI can help facilities teams shift from managing day-to-day issues to building smarter, more resilient operations. Whether the goal is to reduce maintenance costs, improve sustainability or increase reliability, success depends on a connected data foundation and a clear implementation strategy.
Before AI can deliver accurate insights or recommendations, your data needs to be reliable, standardised and connected. Nuvolo helps facilities teams clean up asset data, streamline maintenance histories and centralise information across buildings so AI tools have a strong foundation to work from.
If you want to speak with the Nuvolo team to discuss your technology needs or schedule a demo of our Connected Workplace management solution click here.
Dave Wesley, Nuvolo Connected Workplace
Nuvolo is a global leader in modern, cloud-based Connected Workplace solutions. Our mission is to empower organisations with a unified platform that optimises building operations, enhances asset performance and fosters smarter, data-driven decisions for a more efficient and sustainable workplace. Industries we serve include retail, manufacturing, transportation, healthcare, higher education, life sciences, government and finance. Learn more
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