AI hype is everywhere. The 15th Annual AI & Data Leadership Executive Benchmark Survey, shows what nearly 110 Fortune 1000 companies and global brands are actually doing with AI. Once a future bet, AI is now a business mandate, and most companies are already seeing results.
Investment is essentially universal with an overwhelming 99.1% of surveyed leaders say data and AI are a top organizational priority, and 90.9% are increasing their level of investment. Executives also connect the AI boom to a renewed focus on fundamentals, with 92.7% saying intensified AI interest is driving stronger attention to data.
Leadership models are tightening as AI scales. The Chief Data Officer (CDO) role is now standard, with 90% of companies reporting a CDO in place and nearly 70% describing the role as successful and well-established, up from 47.6% the prior year. Just as importantly, the CDO mandate has shifted toward growth, with 85.5% saying the role is focused on “offense,” meaning innovation and value creation, rather than primarily defensive or compliance work.
At the same time, the Chief AI Officer (CAIO) role is emerging to formalize AI accountability. Roughly 38.5% of organizations now report a CAIO or equivalent, up from 33.1% last year. Reporting lines are still settling, but in most companies without a CAIO, AI leadership continues to sit with the CDO or Chief Digital and Artificial Intelligence Office function, which 69.1% say currently carries the remit.
AI adoption has moved decisively from experiments to production. Two years ago, just 4.7% of firms reported AI in production at scale—this year, that figure is 39.1%. When added to the 54.5% running AI in limited production, 93.6% of organizations now have active AI capabilities in production, signaling that pilots are no longer the dominant mode.
Value is showing up alongside deployment, with 97.3% of organizations report measurable business value from data and AI investments, and 54% say they are realizing a high or significant degree of value, improving on last year’s results and reinforcing that AI programs are increasingly tied to tangible outcomes.
The biggest constraint is not the technology, it is the human side of transformation. A record 93.2% of executives cite cultural challenges and change management as the top barrier to AI success. The work that slows companies down is shifting processes, building skills, changing decision habits, and creating an environment where teams trust data and adopt new ways of working.
Looking forward, leaders view AI as a once-in-a-generation shift. Almost 83% believe AI is likely to be the most transformational technology in a generation. Governance is rising with the stakes, with nearly 80% naming Responsible AI as a top corporate priority and 88.7% saying they have safeguards and guardrails in place.
The takeaway is simple and urgent—the “should we invest” era is over. The winners will be the organizations that align leadership, operating models, culture, and governance fast enough to convert rapidly expanding adoption into sustained business value.