Skip to Main content Skip to Footer
Implementing the EU AI Act structured

Integrate into the organization in a practical and economically smart way.

Contact our experts now!

EU AI Act
Shaping artificial intelligence responsibly

Artificial intelligence has long been an integral part of numerous business models, processes, and decision-making processes—and it is now impossible to imagine everyday working life without it. The EU AI Act has now created the first binding legal framework for the use of AI—and it is already in force. The impact on organization, technology, and governance is significant. Companies must now meet clear requirements for transparency, risk management, documentation, and accountability. This affects not only highly complex models, but also AI applications that are already in productive use today.

The first provisions of the EU AI Act will apply from February 2025 – the time window for implementation is narrow. Those who take a structured approach now will create regulatory certainty, strengthen their own innovative capabilities, and anchor responsible AI in their companies in the long term. We support you in integrating the EU AI Act into your organization in a practical and economically sensible way – with clarity, feasibility, and a focus on the essentials.

The most important milestones at a glance
Who is affected? New roles and responsibilities in the EU AI Act

The EU AI Act does not only affect providers of advanced AI systems – it extends across the entire value chain. From developers to operators to distributors, new regulatory obligations, responsibilities, and liability issues are emerging.

The focus is on four key roles:

  • Providers develop or commission the development of AI systems and market them under their own brand in the EU. They are responsible for safety, quality, and legal compliance throughout the entire life cycle. Examples: OpenAI or Google
  • Importers bring AI systems from third countries into the EU and ensure that each system complies with European safety and compliance standards. Example: European subsidiaries of a US technology company
  • Distributors sell AI systems within the EU and, as the last point of contact before the customer, ensure compliance with all labeling, safety, and purpose requirements. Examples: MediaMarkt or Saturn.
  • Operators use AI systems within their own companies to operate products, services, or processes, ensuring safe, purposeful, and responsible use. Example: Companies with AI-supported processes.
Why is the EU AI Act relevant for your company now?
Establishing legal certainty before obligations take effect

The requirements of the EU AI Act are complex – and the first obligations will come into force in just a few months. Companies now need clarity in order to identify regulatory risks at an early stage, act in compliance, and avoid fines and reputational damage.

Taking responsibility, building trust in a targeted manner

AI systems are increasingly having an external impact: on customers, partners, and authorities. Those who use transparent and ethically responsible AI today build trust, protect their brand, and at the same time meet the key requirements of the AI Act.

Securing innovation, exploiting creative freedom

AI is driving new business models. But innovation needs room to breathe. Companies that invest now in governance, risk management, and data quality are securing their ability to innovate—and avoiding regulatory pitfalls before they arise.

Clarify roles, ensure capacity to act

Whether you are a provider, operator, dealer, or importer, your role determines which obligations apply. By defining your position under the AI Act at an early stage, you can take targeted action, organize responsibility effectively, and use resources efficiently.

Our consulting service for the EU AI Act
Implement successfully, comply with the law!

Your challenges:

  • Uncertainty about which AI applications fall under the EU AI Act and how high the regulatory risk is.
  • Lack of processes and structures to develop, document, and operate AI systems in compliance with the law.
  • Concerns about barriers to innovation due to regulatory requirements and high internal coordination efforts.

UNITY solution approach:

  • We analyze your existing and planned AI applications in terms of classification, risk class, and action required in accordance with the EU AI Act.
  • We work with you to develop appropriate governance structures and processes to ensure transparency, control, and compliance.
  • We support you in establishing a compliant development and operating model – with a focus on efficiency, accountability, and competitiveness.
What are the main objectives and key aspects of the EU AI Act?
Protection of fundamental rights and security

The AI Act ensures that AI systems do not discriminate, manipulate, or cause harm. Strict requirements apply, particularly for high-risk applications, to prevent negative impacts on people, society, and democracy.

Transparency and traceability

Users should be able to recognize when and how AI is being used. The EU AI Act requires labeling, technical documentation, and explainable decision-making logic—especially for sensitive or automated processes.

Clear responsibility and governance

Companies must create internal structures to make AI systems controllable and manageable—with clear roles, risk monitoring, quality controls, and ongoing documentation throughout the entire lifecycle.

Förderung von vertrauenswürdiger Innovation

Einheitliche Regeln schaffen Rechtssicherheit für Unternehmen und stärken die Marktakzeptanz von KI. Der AI Act gibt Orientierung, wie KI verantwortungsvoll entwickelt und eingesetzt werden kann – als Grundlage für nachhaltige, wettbewerbsfähige Geschäftsmodelle.

Project Stories Artificial Intelligence
  • [Translate to English:]
    AI Strategy for Technical Development
    • Targeted use of AI to bring products to market quickly and cost-effectively
    • Successful implementation of various use cases
    • Identification and specification of further potential for improvement together with the specialist departments
    • Derivation of overarching use cases and a harmonized AI strategy
    • Implementation of strategy development, identification of impact levers and design of use cases in all areas of technical development
    • Supporting technical development in the implementation and integration of use cases into the development process
  • Logo Lufthansa Technik
    Workshop for the identification & validation of RPA use cases
    • Definition of objectives and derivation of framework conditions for the workshop concept
    • Preparation and realisation of a cross-divisional information event (Call for Action)
    • Development of evaluation criteria for use case selection
    • Preparation and realisation of the ShapeDay to validate the feasibility of RPA and to identify potential show stoppers
    • Realisation of the pitch event to present the decision basis developed for each use case
    • Follow-up of the entire workshop format and realisation of a lessons learned session
  • [Translate to English:]
    Digitisation of the quality control chart incl. system data
    • Conception and realisation of electronic documentation and archiving of quality data
    • Commissioning of all quality-relevant, manual assembly processes and automated systems on three assembly lines and production-related external areas within the plant
    • Use of mobile clients and touch screens on the shop floor to visualise inspection scopes and document quality data on the line cycle
    • Integration of quality data into new reporting system

Our experts for Artificial Intelligence

Daniel Gaspers

Head of Digital Services

Paderborn, Germany
Contact us

Dr. Michael Herbst

Partner, Business Area Team Lead

Cologne, Germany
Contact us

Jan Carstens

Manager

Paderborn, Germany
Contact us
Related links on the topic of Artificial Intelligence