IBM Study: CEOs are Reshaping C-suite Roles for the AI Era
-
76% of surveyed organizations now have a Chief
AI Officer , up from 26% a year ago - 59% of CEO respondents say the CHRO's influence will increase over the next few years
- Nearly two-thirds of surveyed CEOs are comfortable using AI to help inform major strategic decisions
In the foreword of the study,
The annual
Among the key findings:
- 76% of surveyed organizations have a Chief
AI Officer (CAIO) in 2026, up from just 26% in 2025. - Analysis shows that organizations with an AI-first approach to C-suite design have scaled 10% more AI initiatives enterprise-wide than their peers.
- 64% of surveyed CEOs say they are comfortable making major strategic decisions based on AI-generated input.
- 83% of respondents agree that AI sovereignty is essential to business strategy, underscoring the importance of having the right controls as AI plays a larger enterprise-wide role.
- Surveyed CEOs say only 25% of the workforce is using AI regularly as part of their job, despite 86% believing their employees have the skills to collaborate with AI.
"AI is changing how work gets done, bringing people and software together in new ways, and it's changing how people come together in the workplace," said
New challenges demand different kinds of leadership
- 85% of respondents say all functional leaders must become technology experts in their domain, signaling that AI accountability is expanding beyond specialized roles.
- Among organizations with a CAIO, all surveyed CEOs expect the influence of the role to increase by 2030, alongside rising influence across every member of the C-suite.
- 59% of surveyed CEOs say the CHRO's influence will increase over the next few years.
As CEOs turn to AI-driven decisions, governance and controls become more critical
- By 2030, surveyed CEOs expect 48% of operational decisions where consistency and guardrails can be codified will be made by AI without human intervention, compared to 25% today.
- 79% of executives surveyed confirm they are decentralizing decision-making, distributing accountability as AI plays a more significant role enterprise wide.
Organizations are betting on people to drive AI success
- 83% of CEOs surveyed say AI success depends more on people's adoption than technology.
- Between 2026 and 2028, respondents expect 29% of employees to require reskilling for a different role and 53% to need upskilling to perform their current role more effectively.
- Surveyed organizations that redesigned five core business areas -- technology, finance, HR, operations and cross-functional collaboration -- are four times more likely to have delivered on business objectives.
- 77% of respondents say talent and technology leadership roles are converging, suggesting tighter integration between talent, technology and enterprise strategy.
To view the full study, visit: https://www.ibm.com/thought-leadership/institute-business-value/en-us/c-suite-study/ceo
The study also features industry perspectives from senior executives on how business leaders are responding to AI-driven change. A selection of these firsthand views are available in the addendum below.
*Study Methodology
global research and performance data with expertise from industry thinkers and leading academics to deliver insights that make business leaders smarter. For more world-class thought leadership, visit: www.ibm.com/ibv. To receive more insights, subscribe to the IdeaWatch newsletter: https://ibm.co/ibv-ideawatch.
About
Media Contact
conwaym@us.ibm.com
Executive Perspectives :
"It's not laying AI on top of your existing tools and services. It's reimagining the entire process." --
"You can't forecast every disruption, but you can prepare by building organizations that are resilient, adaptable, and ready to operate through change." -- Andrew Anagnost, President and CEO, Autodesk
"AI has moved from the infrastructure layer, largely invisible, to the surface layer of how we work and how we serve customers." --
"The introduction of AI is more transformative than the introduction of the internet was at the time – not because of the technology itself, but because of its impact on how people work, decide and collaborate." -- Jan Polkerman, CEO,
"AI needs to be embedded into how we operate. That means integrating it into workflows across design, merchandising, marketing, stores, and operations--not as a separate initiative, but as part of how the business runs." -
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/ibm-study-ceos-are-reshaping-c-suite-roles-for-the-ai-era-302760745.html
SOURCE