Imagine a major retailer losing millions because its system misclassifies a “patio heater” as “outdoor furniture,” making it invisible to customers searching for heating solutions. This failure of visual intelligence represents a multi-billion dollar blind spot across industries. Our research into Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs), framed through the compelling proxy problem of Pokémon classification, demonstrates how AI is poised to solve this. The market momentum is clear: the global AI market is projected to grow from $150.2 billion in 2023 to over $1.8 trillion by 2030, with computer vision playing a central role. This isn’t a future trend, it’s a current strategic imperative.
The digital landscape is overwhelmingly visual. Traditional manual tagging and categorisation are not just inefficient; they are economically unsustainable at scale. This creates a critical gap that AI is uniquely positioned to fill.
We intentionally used Pokémon type recognition as a proxy for a fundamental business challenge: teaching AI to decode visual semantics. Just as a Pokémon’s color, texture, and morphology signal its ‘type’ to a fan, a product’s visual attributes signal its category, brand, and audience to an AI. Mastering the former provides a scalable framework for automating the latter. This isn’t a playful experiment; it’s a blueprint for operational transformation.
Our CNN implementation was designed with enterprise-scale deployment in mind, moving beyond academic exercise to practical tooling.
The results delivered a critical strategic lesson. While the model achieved a robust 66.7% validation accuracy on clear-cut categories, its overall 43% performance on the full, noisy dataset is what makes it truly valuable for business planning. It proves that AI’s power is not in achieving perfection, but in achieving scalable, high-value focus. It learned to automatically prioritize the ‘low-hanging fruit’—images with strong visual signatures—freeing human experts to handle the complex exceptions. This ‘collaborative intelligence’ model is the true blueprint for ROI.
The applications translate directly to the bottom line:
When we tasked a leading Large Language Model to analyze the future of visual AI, it emphasized “the shift from mere classification to generative visual understanding—where AI doesn’t just tag an image but describes its commercial context and potential.”
This aligns perfectly with our conclusion. We are moving from Diagnostic AI to Generative Visual Intelligence. The next step isn’t just classifying existing images, but using generative AI to create synthetic training data, predict visual trends, and simulate how product designs will be perceived, closing the loop between data and strategy.
Success requires a disciplined approach:
The market momentum is undeniable: the global computer vision AI market is projected to grow from $14.9 billion in 2023 to $25.4 billion by 2028, signalling widespread enterprise adoption.
What began as classifying cartoon creatures ends with a proven strategic framework. The patterns our CNN learned—distinguishing semantic visual cues—directly translate to commercial contexts where speed, accuracy, and scalability dictate market leadership. The future of business intelligence is not just in the data we can count, but in the images we can teach AI to comprehend and contextualize. The organizations that embrace this shift will not only see their operations transformed but will redefine the competitive landscape itself.



Nubank Vice-Chairman Roberto Campos Neto said the bank will test stablecoin credit card payments, as adoption of stablecoins accelerates across Latin America. Nubank, Latin America’s largest digital bank, is reportedly planning to integrate dollar-pegged stablecoins and credit cards for payments.The move was disclosed by the bank’s vice-chairman and former governor of Brazil’s central bank, Roberto Campos Neto. Speaking at the Meridian 2025 event on Wednesday, he highlighted the importance of blockchain technology in connecting digital assets with the traditional banking system. According to local media reports, Campos Neto said Nubank intends to begin testing stablecoin payments with its credit cards as part of a broader effort to link digital assets with banking services.Read more