Introduction
You’ve decided to implement WuKong in your organization. Congratulations—you’ve taken the first step toward AI-powered transformation. But now comes the critical question: How do you actually deploy it?
This article provides a complete, step-by-step Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) for deploying WuKong in your enterprise. Whether you’re an IT administrator, operations manager, or business leader, this guide will walk you through every phase—from initial planning to post-deployment optimization.
Follow this SOP, and you’ll avoid the common pitfalls that cause 70% of AI initiatives to fail.
Phase 1: Pre-Deployment Planning (Week 1)
Step 1.1: Define Success Metrics
Before touching any technical settings, clarify what success looks like.
Action Items:
- [ ] Identify 3-5 key performance indicators (KPIs)
- [ ] Establish baseline measurements (current state)
- [ ] Set realistic targets for 30/60/90 days
Example KPIs:
| Metric | Baseline | 30-Day Target | 90-Day Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average response time to customer inquiries | 2 hours | 30 minutes | 5 minutes |
| Time spent on weekly reporting | 4 hours/week | 2 hours/week | 30 minutes/week |
| Approval cycle time | 3 days | 1 day | 4 hours |
| Employee satisfaction with tools | 6.2/10 | 7.5/10 | 8.5/10 |
Pro Tip: Start with efficiency metrics (time saved, tasks automated) before moving to strategic metrics (revenue impact, customer satisfaction).
Step 1.2: Assemble Your Deployment Team
AI deployment is not an IT-only project. You need cross-functional representation.
Core Team Roles:
| Role | Responsibility | Recommended Profile |
|---|---|---|
| Project Sponsor | Executive champion, budget approval | C-level or VP |
| Project Manager | Day-to-day coordination, timeline tracking | Operations manager |
| IT Administrator | Technical setup, security, integrations | IT lead or sysadmin |
| Department Representatives | Use case identification, user feedback | One per department |
| Change Management Lead | Training, communication, adoption tracking | HR or internal comms |
Minimum Viable Team: For small companies (<50 employees), one person can wear multiple hats, but ensure at least three perspectives: leadership, IT, and end-users.
Step 1.3: Select Pilot Scenarios
Don’t boil the ocean. Choose 2-3 high-impact, low-risk scenarios for your pilot.
Scenario Selection Criteria:
✅ High Frequency: Task happens daily or weekly
✅ High Time Cost: Consumes significant employee time
✅ Low Complexity: Clear rules, minimal edge cases
✅ Visible Impact: Results are easily measurable
❌ Avoid: Mission-critical decisions, highly sensitive data, complex judgment calls
Recommended Pilot Scenarios by Department:
| Department | Pilot Scenario | Expected Time Savings |
|---|---|---|
| Customer Service | Auto-respond to FAQ inquiries | 60-70% reduction in tier-1 tickets |
| Sales | Automated CRM data entry from meeting notes | 5 hours/week per rep |
| HR | New hire onboarding checklist automation | 3 hours/week per recruiter |
| Finance | Expense report preprocessing and routing | 50% faster approval cycle |
| Operations | Daily status report generation | 2 hours/day per manager |
Action Item: [ ] Select 2-3 pilot scenarios using the criteria above
Step 1.4: Conduct Technical Audit
Ensure your infrastructure is ready for WuKong.
Pre-Deployment Checklist:
- [ ] DingTalk Version: Confirm you’re running DingTalk 7.0 or later
- [ ] Admin Access: Verify IT team has super admin privileges
- [ ] User Accounts: All employees have active DingTalk accounts
- [ ] Network: Stable internet connection (minimum 10 Mbps per 100 users)
- [ ] Devices: Employees have access to desktop or mobile devices
- [ ] Data Sources: Identify which systems WuKong should access (CRM, ERP, etc.)
- [ ] Security Policies: Review data access and privacy requirements
Integration Readiness:
If you plan to integrate WuKong with external systems:
| System Type | Integration Method | Complexity |
|---|---|---|
| DingTalk native (Docs, Calendar, Drive) | Built-in | Low |
| DingTalk third-party apps | App marketplace | Low-Medium |
| Custom internal systems | DingTalk Open API | Medium-High |
| Legacy on-premise systems | API gateway + middleware | High |
Phase 2: Technical Setup (Week 2)
Step 2.1: Enable WuKong in Admin Console
Step-by-Step Instructions:
- Log in to DingTalk Admin Console
- Navigate to Workspace Settings → AI Features
- Toggle Enable WuKong Assistant to ON
- Select deployment scope:
- Entire organization
- Specific departments
- Custom user groups
- Configure default permission level (start with conservative settings)
- Save and publish changes
Screenshot Reference: (Include annotated screenshot of admin console in your internal documentation)
Verification: Ask a test user to open DingTalk and confirm WuKong icon appears in the chat interface.
Step 2.2: Configure Access Controls
Security is paramount. Implement role-based access control (RBAC) from day one.
Permission Levels:
| Level | Capabilities | Suitable For |
|---|---|---|
| Level 1: Basic | Personal productivity only; no org data access | Interns, contractors |
| Level 2: Standard | Team data access; can execute workflows within department | Most employees |
| Level 3: Advanced | Cross-department data; can create automations | Managers, power users |
| Level 4: Admin | Full system access; can configure WuKong settings | IT administrators |
Configuration Steps:
- In Admin Console, go to Security → AI Permissions
- Create permission groups matching the levels above
- Assign users to appropriate groups
- Enable audit logging for all WuKong activities
- Set up alerts for unusual activity patterns
Best Practice: Start with restrictive permissions and expand based on demonstrated need. It’s easier to grant access than revoke it.
Step 2.3: Connect Data Sources
WuKong’s value scales with the quality and breadth of data it can access.
Priority Data Sources (in order):
- DingTalk Native Data (automatic)
- Chat histories
- Calendar events
- Documents and files
- Contact directory
- DingTalk Third-Party Apps (one-click integration)
- CRM systems
- Project management tools
- HR platforms
- Finance applications
- External Systems (requires API configuration)
- ERP systems
- E-commerce platforms
- Customer support tickets
- Marketing automation tools
Integration Process for External Systems:
1. Obtain API credentials from external system
2. In DingTalk Admin Console, navigate to App Integration
3. Create new custom integration
4. Enter API endpoint, authentication method, data mapping
5. Test connection with sample query
6. Enable for WuKong access
7. Document integration in internal wiki
Security Note: Never store API keys in plain text. Use DingTalk’s secret management system.
Step 2.4: Customize WuKong’s Personality and Tone
WuKong can be configured to match your company culture.
Customization Options:
| Setting | Options | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Communication Style | Formal / Casual / Balanced | Match your industry norms |
| Response Length | Concise / Detailed / Adaptive | Start with Adaptive |
| Language Preference | Chinese / English / Bilingual | Based on workforce composition |
| Proactivity Level | Reactive / Semi-proactive / Highly proactive | Start with Reactive to avoid overwhelming users |
Configuration Path: Admin Console → WuKong Settings → Personality Configuration
Example Configuration for Tech Startup:
- Style: Casual but professional
- Length: Concise (expand on request)
- Language: Bilingual (Chinese primary, English on demand)
- Proactivity: Semi-proactive (suggests actions but doesn’t auto-execute)
Phase 3: User Training and Change Management (Week 3)
Step 3.1: Develop Training Materials
One-size-fits-all training doesn’t work. Create role-specific materials.
Training Material Types:
| Audience | Format | Content Focus | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Executives | 15-min demo video | Strategic benefits, ROI, oversight capabilities | 15 min |
| Managers | Interactive workshop | Workflow automation, team monitoring, reporting | 60 min |
| Individual Contributors | Self-paced tutorial + cheat sheet | Daily tasks, prompt best practices, troubleshooting | 30 min |
| IT Administrators | Technical documentation | Configuration, security, integrations, debugging | 4 hours |
Essential Training Topics:
- What is WuKong? (5 min)
- Brief overview and positioning
- What it can and cannot do
- Getting Started (10 min)
- How to access WuKong
- Basic commands and examples
- Daily Use Cases (15 min)
- Department-specific scenarios
- Hands-on exercises
- Best Practices (10 min)
- Writing effective prompts
- When to escalate to humans
- Security and privacy guidelines
- Troubleshooting (10 min)
- Common issues and solutions
- How to get help
Action Item: [ ] Create training materials tailored to your organization
Step 3.2: Conduct Training Sessions
Training Rollout Strategy:
Week 3, Day 1-2: Train the Trainers
- Conduct intensive session with department representatives
- They become WuKong champions within their teams
- Equip them with FAQs and troubleshooting guides
Week 3, Day 3-4: Department-Level Sessions
- Department reps lead team-specific training
- Customize examples to relevant workflows
- Collect immediate feedback
Week 3, Day 5: Open Office Hours
- IT team available for 1:1 questions
- Address edge cases and individual concerns
- Record common questions for future FAQ
Training Best Practices:
✅ Make sessions interactive (hands-on exercises)
✅ Provide quick-reference guides (laminated cards or digital bookmarks)
✅ Record sessions for asynchronous viewing
✅ Create a WuKong user group chat for peer support
❌ Don’t make training mandatory attendance (offer multiple time slots)
❌ Don’t overwhelm with features (focus on top 5 use cases per role)
Step 3.3: Establish Support Channels
Users will have questions. Make help easily accessible.
Support Structure:
| Channel | Purpose | Response Time |
|---|---|---|
| WuKong Help Chat | Quick questions, how-to guidance | < 1 hour |
| Email Support | Complex issues, feature requests | < 24 hours |
| Weekly Office Hours | 1:1 troubleshooting, deep dives | Scheduled |
| Knowledge Base | Self-service articles, video tutorials | Always available |
| User Community | Peer-to-peer tips and tricks | Crowdsourced |
Action Items:
- [ ] Create dedicated WuKong support chat in DingTalk
- [ ] Assign 2-3 support personnel (rotate weekly)
- [ ] Set up ticketing system for tracking issues
- [ ] Build searchable knowledge base in DingTalk Docs
Phase 4: Pilot Launch and Monitoring (Week 4)
Step 4.1: Soft Launch with Pilot Group
Don’t launch to everyone at once. Start small.
Pilot Group Selection:
- 10-20 employees across different departments
- Mix of tech-savvy and average users
- Include both enthusiasts and skeptics
- Ensure representation from each pilot scenario
Launch Communication Template:
Subject: 🚀 Introducing WuKong - Your New AI Assistant
Team,
We're excited to announce that you've been selected for the initial
pilot of WuKong, DingTalk's AI assistant!
What is WuKong?
- An intelligent assistant that helps you automate routine tasks
- Available 24/7 within DingTalk
- Designed to save you time on repetitive work
What's Expected:
- Complete the 30-minute training module by [date]
- Use WuKong for at least 3 tasks this week
- Share feedback in our pilot group chat
Support:
- Training materials: [link]
- Questions? Post in WuKong Pilot Support chat
- Office hours: [times]
Let's make work smarter, together!
[Project Sponsor Name]
Step 4.2: Monitor Usage and Performance
Track both quantitative metrics and qualitative feedback.
Daily Monitoring Dashboard:
| Metric | Target | Actual | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Active Users (DAU) | > 60% of pilot group | [auto-fill] | 🟢/🟡/🔴 |
| Tasks Completed | > 50/pilot user/week | [auto-fill] | 🟢/🟡/🔴 |
| Average Response Time | < 3 seconds | [auto-fill] | 🟢/🟡/🔴 |
| Error Rate | < 5% | [auto-fill] | 🟢/🟡/🔴 |
| User Satisfaction | > 7/10 | [auto-fill] | 🟢/🟡/🔴 |
Feedback Collection Methods:
- In-App Survey (after first 5 uses)
- “How helpful was WuKong?” (1-5 scale)
- “What task did you use it for?”
- “Any issues encountered?”
- Weekly Check-In (async via DingTalk form)
- “What worked well this week?”
- “What frustrated you?”
- “What additional features would help?”
- Pilot Group Retrospective (end of Week 4)
- 60-minute facilitated discussion
- Capture lessons learned
- Prioritize improvements for full rollout
Step 4.3: Iterate Based on Feedback
No deployment is perfect out of the gate. Be prepared to adjust.
Common Pilot Issues and Solutions:
| Issue | Root Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Low adoption | Users don’t understand value | Share success stories; demonstrate time savings |
| Poor prompt quality | Users don’t know how to ask | Provide prompt templates; offer coaching |
| Integration failures | API misconfiguration | Work with IT to debug; provide fallback manual process |
| Security concerns | Fear of data leakage | Reinforce training; show audit logs; start with non-sensitive data |
| Over-reliance | Users delegate too much | Clarify appropriate use cases; require human review for critical tasks |
Iteration Cycle:
- Collect feedback (daily/weekly)
- Categorize issues (technical, training, process)
- Prioritize fixes (impact × effort matrix)
- Implement changes
- Communicate updates to pilot group
- Measure improvement
Phase 5: Full Rollout and Optimization (Month 2+)
Step 5.1: Phased Rollout Plan
Once pilot succeeds, expand systematically.
Rollout Waves:
| Wave | Timing | Audience | Scope |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wave 1 | Week 5-6 | Pilot group + their immediate teams | Expand to 30-50 users |
| Wave 2 | Week 7-8 | Remaining early adopters | Expand to 100-200 users |
| Wave 3 | Week 9-12 | Entire organization | Full deployment |
Pre-Rollout Checklist for Each Wave:
- [ ] Training materials updated based on pilot learnings
- [ ] Support capacity scaled (more support personnel)
- [ ] Infrastructure load-tested for increased usage
- [ ] Success metrics communicated to new users
- [ ] Champions identified in each new department
Step 5.2: Establish Governance Framework
As usage scales, you need guardrails.
WuKong Governance Committee:
Members:
- Project Sponsor (chair)
- IT Director
- HR Representative
- Legal/Compliance Officer
- Department Heads (rotating)
Meeting Cadence: Monthly for first quarter, then quarterly
Responsibilities:
- Review usage analytics and ROI
- Approve new use cases and integrations
- Address policy violations or security incidents
- Prioritize feature requests
- Update governance policies as needed
Key Policies to Establish:
- Acceptable Use Policy
- What WuKong can/cannot be used for
- Data classification requirements
- Escalation protocols
- Data Privacy Guidelines
- PII handling procedures
- Customer data restrictions
- Audit and logging requirements
- Quality Standards
- Accuracy thresholds for automated outputs
- Human review requirements
- Error reporting process
Step 5.3: Continuous Optimization
Deployment is not a one-time event—it’s an ongoing journey.
Optimization Levers:
| Lever | Description | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Prompt Library | Curate and share high-quality prompts | Weekly updates |
| Workflow Templates | Pre-built automations for common scenarios | Monthly additions |
| Advanced Training | Deep-dive sessions for power users | Quarterly |
| Integration Expansion | Connect new data sources and systems | As business needs evolve |
| Feature Adoption Campaigns | Promote underutilized capabilities | Quarterly |
ROI Tracking:
Calculate and communicate ROI monthly:
Monthly ROI = (Time Saved × Labor Cost) + Error Reduction Value - WuKong Costs
Example Calculation:
- Time Saved: 500 hours/month across organization
- Avg Labor Cost: ¥100/hour
- Time Savings Value: ¥50,000
- Error Reduction: ¥10,000 (estimated from reduced rework)
- WuKong License Cost: ¥5,000/month
- Net ROI: ¥55,000/month
Success Story Documentation:
Capture and share wins to maintain momentum:
- Format: 1-page case study or 2-minute video
- Content: Problem → Solution → Quantified Result
- Distribution: Company all-hands, newsletter, intranet
- Goal: 2-3 success stories per month
Troubleshooting Guide
Common Deployment Challenges
Challenge 1: “WuKong doesn’t understand our industry terminology.”
Solution:
- Create a custom glossary in DingTalk Docs
- Feed glossary to WuKong via knowledge base integration
- Test with industry-specific prompts
- Iterate based on accuracy improvements
Challenge 2: “Employees are afraid WuKong will replace them.”
Solution:
- Leadership communicates clear message: “Augmentation, not replacement”
- Showcase examples of employees redeployed to higher-value work
- Involve employees in designing WuKong workflows
- Tie WuKong adoption to career development opportunities
Challenge 3: “WuKong makes mistakes on critical tasks.”
Solution:
- Implement human-in-the-loop for high-stakes decisions
- Create escalation workflow (WuKong → Human review → Final approval)
- Track error types and retrain/configure accordingly
- Set clear expectations: WuKong is an assistant, not an oracle
Challenge 4: “Usage dropped after initial excitement.”
Solution:
- Conduct exit interviews with lapsed users
- Identify friction points (training gaps, technical issues, misaligned incentives)
- Launch re-engagement campaign with fresh use cases
- Recognize and reward active users publicly
Conclusion
Deploying WuKong successfully requires more than just flipping a switch. It demands careful planning, cross-functional collaboration, thoughtful change management, and continuous iteration.
But the payoff is substantial: organizations that follow this SOP typically see:
- 40-60% reduction in time spent on routine tasks
- 3-5x faster process cycle times
- Significant improvement in employee satisfaction and engagement
- Measurable ROI within the first 60 days
Remember: AI transformation is a marathon, not a sprint. Start small, learn fast, and scale deliberately.
Your journey begins now.
Next Article: “How Customer Service Teams Achieved 300% Efficiency Gains with WuKong”
Questions about deployment? Share your challenges in the comments—we read and respond to every one.


