There’s a clear shift underway in how CEOs are reading the environment.
Generative AI has moved well beyond experimentation.
Across Australian businesses, it is now being used in operations, customer engagement, finance and talent management. But while adoption is accelerating, governance is not keeping pace.
This gap is becoming one of the defining leadership challenges of 2026.
AI is already embedded in core business functions
More than a side project, AI is now part of day-to-day execution.
Leaders report using generative AI to:
- Automate administrative and compliance tasks
- Improve forecasting and reporting
- Support marketing, sales and client communications
- Streamline internal operations
In many cases, AI is not replacing roles. It is increasing output from existing teams.
The result is a clear link between AI adoption and productivity ambition.
Download – Turning Risk into Readiness: CEO Insights on AI Governance and Productivity Report
But governance maturity is uneven
While AI use is widespread, formal governance is still developing.
Across businesses, the spectrum includes:
- No policy at all
- Informal or ad hoc guidelines
- Policies currently being developed
- Fully established governance frameworks
Even among organisations actively using AI, many are operating without clear, formal guardrails.
This creates a tension: the opportunity is clear, but so is the risk.
The biggest concerns are consistent
Across industries, CEOs are aligned on what is holding them back.
The key barriers include:
- Data security and privacy risks
- Regulatory uncertainty
- Lack of internal capability and skills
- Integration complexity and unclear ROI
In particular, data governance is emerging as the foundation issue.
As one respondent noted, AI itself is not the risk. The data behind it is.
Governance is becoming a growth enabler
One of the most important insights from this report is the relationship between governance and adoption.
Businesses with more mature AI governance frameworks tend to:
- Use AI across more parts of the organisation
- Move beyond isolated pilots
- View AI as a strategic lever for productivity
In contrast, those without governance frameworks are more likely to:
- Limit usage
- Delay adoption
- Treat AI as experimental
This reframes governance entirely.
Done well, it is not a constraint. It is an enabler.
A shift in leadership mindset
What’s emerging is a new leadership discipline.
AI governance is no longer just an IT or compliance issue. It is a CEO-level responsibility.
Leaders are now required to:
- Define where AI can and cannot be used
- Protect sensitive data while enabling experimentation
- Align AI usage with broader business strategy
- Continuously evolve policies as technology changes
This is not a one-time decision. It is an ongoing capability.
The Decisions Shaping Business Performance in 2026 – Download the latest CEO Confidence Index report
A practical way forward: Diagnose, design, deploy
For CEOs looking to move forward with confidence, a simple framework is emerging:
1. Diagnose
Understand where AI is already being used and assess current governance maturity.
2. Design
Establish clear guidelines covering acceptable use, data protection, approved tools and compliance.
3. Deploy
Embed governance through communication, training and ongoing review.
This approach allows organisations to move forward without waiting for perfect certainty.
Final thought
AI is not coming. It is already here.
The question is no longer whether to adopt it, but how to do so responsibly and effectively.
The leaders who will get the most value from AI are not necessarily those moving fastest.
They are the ones building the clarity, confidence and guardrails that allow their organisations to use it well.
Because in the end, productivity gains don’t come from technology alone.
They come from how leaders choose to use it.
Download the latest research report: Turning Risk into Readiness: CEO Insights on AI Governance and Productivity and explore how business leaders are balancing innovation, risk and productivity in 2026.
