AI Governance is not generic.
It breaks inside
real industries.
The AIGN Industries Radar translates AI regulation, platform developments, use cases, risk signals and governance patterns into industry-specific governance action for regulated and operationally complex organizations.
Not a generic AI newsletter. A sector-specific early-warning system for governance exposure.
The Radar does not sell information. It sells sector-specific interpretation, prioritization and defensible governance action.
Banking: model risk and explainability pressure
Healthcare: patient safety and human oversight
Public Sector: legitimacy, transparency and rights
Industry: AI must become defensible in context
Organizations do not lack AI governance frameworks.
They lack industry translation.
AI governance fails when it stays generic. A bank, hospital, insurer, manufacturer, public institution, software company, energy provider and consulting firm do not face the same risk logic. The decisive question is not only what the law says — but how AI affects the specific processes, duties, customers, users, evidence and accountability structures of each sector.
“Which AI use cases in our industry create high-risk exposure under the EU AI Act or sector regulation?”
“Which decisions, recommendations or automated actions must be explained, logged or approved by humans?”
“Where do we need stronger controls, documentation, monitoring and evidence before scaling AI?”
“Can we defend our AI governance approach under audit, board, customer, regulator or public scrutiny?”
The risk is not that AI is used.
The risk is that sector-specific governance
does not exist.
Every industry creates its own governance pressure: financial supervision, medical safety, public accountability, industrial reliability, data protection, customer trust, professional liability and operational resilience. That is why AI governance must be translated by industry.
AI affects decisions, recommendations, access and accountability
Each industry has different duties, evidence needs and failure modes
Boards need industry-specific defensibility, not generic assurances
Governance must become operational, monitored and repeatable
A sector-specific AI Governance Radar for real-world industries.
The AIGN Industries Radar monitors AI governance developments, use-case patterns, regulatory signals and sector risks — then translates them into industry-specific governance impact, control needs and practical actions.
The product is not generic monitoring. The value lies in sector interpretation: what AI developments mean for banking, healthcare, software, public institutions, insurance, manufacturing, energy and consulting.
From general AI noise to industry-specific governance action.
Eight industry lenses.
One governance operating view.
Financial Services & Banking
AI governance for credit, fraud, AML, customer interaction, model risk, outsourcing, explainability and supervisory defensibility.
“In banking, AI governance must survive model risk, audit and supervisory scrutiny.”
Healthcare & Life Sciences
AI governance for clinical support, diagnostics, patient communication, research, sensitive health data, medical safety and human oversight.
“In healthcare, governance is not paperwork. It protects trust, patients and decisions.”
Software & Technology
AI governance for AI-native products, agents, copilots, datasets, APIs, model lifecycle, product liability and platform accountability.
“Technology providers must govern not only AI use — but AI they put into the market.”
Public Sector
AI governance for citizen services, administrative decisions, procurement, transparency, non-discrimination, explainability and legitimacy.
“Public AI must be lawful, explainable and democratically defensible.”
Insurance
AI governance for underwriting, pricing, claims, fraud detection, customer scoring, fairness, explainability and regulatory scrutiny.
“In insurance, AI governance determines whether automated decisions remain fair and defensible.”
Manufacturing & Industry
AI governance for predictive maintenance, robotics, quality control, supply chain, industrial automation, safety and operational resilience.
“In manufacturing, AI governance connects automation, safety and operational control.”
Energy & Infrastructure
AI governance for grid optimization, forecasting, critical infrastructure, cybersecurity, resilience, autonomy and systemic risk.
“In energy, AI governance becomes infrastructure governance.”
Consulting & Professional Services
AI governance for client advisory, knowledge systems, confidential data, AI-assisted deliverables, professional liability and quality assurance.
“Consulting firms must govern AI before AI governs their advice.”
AI Governance & Regulation
EU AI Act, GDPR, ISO/IEC 42001, NIST AI RMF, human oversight, documentation, logging, monitoring and board-level defensibility.
“The same law creates different governance duties in different industries.”
Choose the industry.
See the governance questions.
The Industries Radar translates AI governance into sector-specific use cases, controls, accountability questions and evidence needs. Each industry has its own risk logic.
“Which AI-supported decisions affect customers, credit, fraud detection, AML, suitability or financial outcomes?”
The Radar identifies where AI becomes governance-relevant because it touches regulated decision-making, model risk, customer treatment or supervisory expectations.
“Can the institution explain model outputs, recommendations and human overrides under audit or supervisory review?”
The Radar translates AI developments into logging, documentation, validation, explainability, human oversight and accountability requirements.
“Where do AI tools create outsourcing, third-party, data, conduct or operational resilience exposure?”
The Radar highlights governance actions across Risk, Compliance, Legal, IT, CISO, DPO, Internal Audit and business owners.
“Which AI use cases influence clinical decisions, patient communication, diagnostics, triage or treatment support?”
The Radar identifies where AI touches patient safety, clinical workflows, medical responsibility and high-sensitivity data contexts.
“Where is human oversight required — and can it be proven that clinicians remain meaningfully in control?”
The Radar turns AI capabilities into governance questions around escalation, validation, documentation, professional accountability and review mechanisms.
“Can the organization defend how patient data, research data or health-related AI outputs are governed?”
The Radar connects AI use to data protection, medical ethics, transparency, vendor governance and evidence of safe deployment.
“Which AI features create provider obligations, product liability, documentation or user transparency needs?”
The Radar helps technology providers understand how AI product capabilities translate into governance duties before market exposure scales.
“How are models, datasets, prompts, agents, connectors and outputs governed across the product lifecycle?”
The Radar maps AI-native development to lifecycle controls, testing, monitoring, red-teaming, change management and release governance.
“Can customers, auditors or regulators understand what the AI system does and how risks are controlled?”
The Radar creates a governance lens for product teams, legal, engineering, security, compliance and customer-facing trust functions.
“Which AI use cases influence citizens, benefits, public services, administrative decisions or eligibility assessments?”
The Radar identifies public-sector AI exposure where rights, fairness, transparency and administrative legitimacy become decisive.
“Can a public institution explain how AI was used, why it was appropriate and who remains accountable?”
The Radar translates AI developments into transparency duties, documentation, human review, procurement controls and democratic defensibility.
“Where could AI create discrimination, exclusion, opacity or loss of public trust?”
The Radar supports governance teams with questions around bias, accessibility, complaints, oversight, accountability and public communication.
“Which AI systems influence underwriting, pricing, claims, fraud detection or customer segmentation?”
The Radar identifies governance relevance where AI affects access to insurance, premium logic, claims outcomes or customer treatment.
“Can the insurer explain and defend automated recommendations, risk scores and claim decisions?”
The Radar maps AI use to fairness, explainability, human oversight, customer communication, complaint handling and audit evidence.
“Where do AI models create discrimination, data protection or regulatory conduct exposure?”
The Radar converts developments into practical governance actions for Legal, Compliance, Risk, Data, Actuarial, IT and Claims functions.
“Which AI systems affect production quality, predictive maintenance, robotics, safety or supply chain decisions?”
The Radar identifies governance exposure where AI moves from analysis into industrial process control, safety relevance and operational dependency.
“Can the organization prove who approved AI-supported process changes and how failures are detected?”
The Radar maps industrial AI to change management, control ownership, monitoring, escalation, documentation and accountability.
“Where do AI systems create operational resilience, supplier, cyber or product quality risks?”
The Radar supports governance across Operations, IT, Security, Quality, Legal, Risk, Procurement and Internal Audit.
“Which AI use cases affect grid operations, forecasting, asset management, trading, customer systems or critical infrastructure?”
The Radar identifies where AI becomes governance-relevant because it touches resilience, security, continuity or systemic infrastructure dependency.
“Where does AI increase autonomy, cyber exposure, operational dependency or failure propagation risk?”
The Radar translates AI developments into controls around monitoring, escalation, fallback, human oversight, vendor risk and cybersecurity.
“Can the organization demonstrate defensible governance for AI in critical systems?”
The Radar supports evidence needs across Security, Operations, Risk, Compliance, Legal, Engineering and board-level oversight.
“How is AI used in client work, research, analysis, proposal writing, deliverables or internal knowledge systems?”
The Radar identifies where AI affects professional responsibility, client confidentiality, quality assurance and advisory defensibility.
“Can the firm prove that AI-generated or AI-assisted advice was reviewed, validated and responsibly used?”
The Radar translates AI use into review controls, source validation, documentation, partner accountability and client disclosure questions.
“Where do AI tools create confidentiality, IP, data leakage, hallucination or professional liability exposure?”
The Radar supports governance across partners, legal, risk, compliance, knowledge management, IT and client teams.
Not just sector monitoring.
Governance-ready output.
Each Radar cycle converts industry-specific AI developments into executive-ready and operationally usable deliverables.
Industry Briefing
A structured briefing with executive summary, sector development, affected use cases, governance relevance, risk level and business impact.
Risk & Control Mapping
Mapping to human oversight, accountability, logging, documentation, access rights, vendor governance, auditability and sector-specific controls.
Action Backlog
Prioritized actions for Legal, Compliance, Risk, IT, Security, DPO, Internal Audit, AI Governance Leads and business owners.
Four steps.
Industry clarity.
Industry selection
Select the relevant industry lens: Banking, Healthcare, Software & Technology, Public Sector, Insurance, Manufacturing, Energy or Consulting.
Governance filtering
Developments are filtered for industry relevance: use-case risk, data sensitivity, decision impact, human oversight, auditability, regulatory exposure and accountability.
AIGN interpretation
AIGN translates the development into practical meaning for boards, AI governance leads, legal, compliance, risk, security, IT and operational teams.
Governance action
Each cycle ends with concrete checks, recommended actions, risk level, affected functions and one defensibility question the organization should be able to answer.
Why organizations buy the Industries Radar.
Industry-specific clarity
Teams no longer rely on generic AI governance language. They receive sector-specific interpretation of what matters and why.
Less abstraction. More relevance.
Faster prioritization
The Radar helps identify which AI developments, use cases and risks should be handled first — based on industry exposure and business relevance.
Not every AI risk is equal in every sector.
Board-ready defensibility
Leadership gets concise explanations of sector exposure, affected functions, required checks and evidence needs.
Can we defend our AI governance in our specific industry?
Start with one industry.
Scale into governance intelligence.
Three service levels depending on how much interpretation, cadence and executive support your organization needs.
Pilot
Industry Radar Starter
€950
per month · monthly cancellable
For organizations that want a focused first industry governance radar.- 1 monthly briefing for one selected industry
- Top 5 AI governance developments with sector relevance
- Risk level and affected functions
- Action checklist for the next 30 days
- Email delivery as PDF or executive memo
- Optional 30-minute review call
Recommended
Industry Radar Professional
€1,950
per month · monthly cancellable
For AI governance leads, compliance teams and sector owners.- 2 briefings per month for one selected industry
- Governance impact assessment per development
- Risk & control mapping
- Monthly 60-minute sparring call
- Governance action backlog
- Board-level summary
- EU AI Act, GDPR, ISO 42001 and NIST alignment lens
Enterprise
Industry Intelligence Desk
€7,500+
per month · scope-based
For regulated organizations, groups and larger transformation programs.- Weekly monitoring and executive briefing
- Multiple industry or business-unit lenses
- Use-case-specific impact assessments
- Control and policy update recommendations
- Quarterly board or audit committee report
- Monthly steering call
- Optional workshops for governance, risk, IT and business teams
Turn industry-specific AI developments into governance action before they become exposure.
Start with one focused industry lens. We define your priority sector, target audience and first governance question — then deliver the first Radar briefing within the agreed monthly cycle.
- Choose one industry lens or a combined cross-industry view
- Define the relevant audience: Board, Legal, Compliance, Risk, IT, Security, DPO, Internal Audit or business owners
- Receive your first governance-ready briefing
- Review practical actions and backlog in a short sparring call
- Scale into monthly or enterprise service if useful
Request the AIGN Industries Radar
Write directly with your industry focus: Banking, Healthcare, Software & Technology, Public Sector, Insurance, Manufacturing, Energy or Consulting.
Include your organization type, current AI focus and the governance question you need answered first.
Suggested first step: 30-minute fit call · One industry lens · Monthly pilot available