\begin{abstract} \absdiv{Background} Despite its long-standing history, artificial intelligence (AI) has only recently started enjoying widespread industry awareness and adoption; partly thanks to the prevalence of frameworks accessibly exposing state-of-the-art models. In order to achieve robust production deployments, the successful integration of AI components demands strong engineering methods. Concerningly, a tendency seems to be unfolding: even though professionals already have access to frameworks for deploying AI correctly, case studies and developer surveys have found that many deployments do not follow best practices. \absdiv{Objective} This thesis sets out to investigate the reasons behind the asymmetry between the adoption of accessible AI libraries and existing reusable solutions to robust deployments. A software framework called \textit{GreatAI} is designed which aims to facilitate \underline{G}eneral \underline{R}obust \underline{E}nd-to-end \underline{A}utomated \underline{T}rustworthy AI deployments while attempting to overcome the practical drawbacks of its predecessors. \absdiv{Method} The utility of \textit{GreatAI} is validated by applying the principles of design science methodology through iteratively designing it in a case study of a commercial text mining pipeline. Subsequently, interviews are conducted with practitioners for validating the generalisability of the design. \absdiv{Results} To do. \absdiv{Conclusions} To do. \end{abstract}