AuditBoard, a leading AI-driven platform specializing in connected risk, has unveiled its Risk Intelligence Report, highlighting significant challenges within enterprise risk management. Despite 53% of companies adopting AI tools, many find themselves ensnared in inconsistent execution cycles, causing confidence to wane and projects to stagnate in 'pilot mode.'
The inaugural insights, amalgamating proprietary data from more than half of the Fortune 500 and survey responses from over 400 global risk leaders, pinpoint the "middle maturity trap" as a chief hurdle. This barrier impedes organisations from transforming high investment levels into sustained resilience and strategic foresight.
Chief Product and Technology Officer at AuditBoard, Happy Wang, commented on the complex nature of today's risk environment. Enterprises are keen to explore AI to navigate emergent threats but struggle to transition intent into reliable practices. Notably, the difference between leading and lagging entities lies not in allocation but in the integration of governance, ownership, and cadence across all risk dimensions.
Although 53% of enterprises are integrating AI tools, and 39% expanding AI/ML skills, the execution remains brittle. AI acceptance witnessed a sharp downturn in July, with decision times extending due to murky governance, causing adoption to falter.
Siloed operations and inconsistent follow-through characterise this trap. While collaboration surged in July, it dissipated quickly, impeding continuous progress. Key dimensions like AI & Automation and Control Maturity lack consistency.
Successful leaders turn governance into a pillar of foresight and trust by institutionalising risk oversight in board meetings, treating control adoption as continuous management habits, and aligning Audit, Risk, Compliance, and Infosec teams on unified KPIs.
Chief Executive Officer, Raul Villar Jr., stresses the transformative potential of AI in enterprises, emphasising the importance of overcoming the 'middle maturity trap.' The real challenge is not financial but lies in closing the execution gap, turning governance into a cohesive habit across key business functions.