Where do you use AI and what does it do?
Buyers want a plain-language inventory: which systems, what purpose, which data, which third-party models. If you cannot produce this in 48 hours, you will lose deals to someone who can.
What is your EU AI Act classification?
Buyers in regulated sectors increasingly ask whether your product is high-risk under Annex III, and what obligations that triggers. Having a documented classification with rationale is more credible than saying you are reviewing it.
How do humans oversee AI decisions?
Buyers want to know that a human can review, override or correct AI outputs in your system. A short oversight policy and escalation procedure satisfies most procurement questionnaires on this point.
Who are your AI vendors and subprocessors?
Enterprise buyers need a list of AI model providers, hosting locations and subprocessors. This is increasingly standard in due diligence alongside GDPR data maps.
Can you maintain this evidence over time?
The hardest question to answer well. Buyers want to know your governance will stay current, not just reflect a point-in-time audit. A described cadence for reviewing and updating your AI inventory and controls is more convincing than a static document.
AI Act Ready helps you build and maintain all five answers as a reusable evidence pack.