The AI Implementation Paradox in Danish SMEs: Why Positive Intentions Fail to Translate into Sustained Use

Authors

Kenneth Dosanjh
Business Academy Copenhagen image/svg+xml

Synopsis

A substantial gap persists between organizational intention to adopt artificial intelligence (AI) marketing tools and their sustained use. This study investigates why Danish small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) with clear implementation intentions nonetheless fail to implement or scale AI adoption. Drawing on a qualitative multiple case study of six Danish SMEs and integrating the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM), Resource-Based View (RBV), and organizational AI capability research, we identify five mechanisms that systematically undermine intention-to-use translation: expectation-reality mismatches, time paradoxes, organizational structure constraints, tool proliferation, and support vacuums. We introduce the “intention-expansion gap,” in which successful initial adoption stabilizes at partial use despite persistent expansion intentions. We extend TAM by positioning implementation capability as a moderator of the intention-behavior relationship and reconceptualize perceived ease of use as dynamically evolving; we extend RBV by showing resource constraints operate as implementation rather than adoption barriers.

Author Biography

Kenneth Dosanjh, Business Academy Copenhagen

Copenhagen, Denmark. E-mail: kssd@ek.dk

Published

June 5, 2026

License

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

How to Cite

Dosanjh, K. (2026). The AI Implementation Paradox in Danish SMEs: Why Positive Intentions Fail to Translate into Sustained Use. In D. Vidmar, A. Pucihar, M. Kljajić Borštnar, R. W. H. Bons, M. Glowatz, & H.-D. Zimmermann (Eds.), & (Ed.), 39th Bled eConference: Co-Creating Human-Centred and Responsible Digital Futures; Conference Proceedings (Vols. 39., pp. 123-142). University of Maribor Press. https://doi.org/10.18690/um.fov.4.2026.8