
This is evidenced by IBM Corporation’s global report “AI on the Move”. In fact, the presented figures record a tectonic shift in the corporate hierarchy: the end of the era of chaotic AI experiments and the beginning of the phase of rigid centralized integration of algorithms into fundamental business processes.
IBM’s report confirms an obvious trend of recent times: if in the past the introduction of innovations was the task of IT departments (CIO), today the issue of using artificial intelligence has moved to the level of strategic survival. Companies are no longer asking “do we need AI?”, they are asking “who will be responsible for its accountability and profitability?”.
Labor transformation and the “human adaptation factor”
IBM’s analysis revealed a paradoxical trend: while technology is becoming increasingly sophisticated, the success of its implementation is 83% dependent not on computing power, but on the readiness of staff to change.
In 2026, we are witnessing the birth of the “adaptive economy.” The report predicts that by 2028, one in three employees (about 32% of the global workforce) will need to radically change their job role or undergo deep retraining.
“We have reached a tipping point where the potential of algorithms is far outpacing the ability of organizations to manage them. The emergence of the CAIO position is a recognition that AI has become too powerful to remain just a ‘tool,'” IBM Institute for Business Value experts said.
What conclusions can be drawn from this document? First, creating a vertical of power around AI allows companies to avoid a “technology patchwork quilt” where different departments use incompatible models. Second, “transparency becomes currency.” In an increasingly regulated environment, it is the AI director who assumes the legal risks for “hallucinations” and biased systems.
For investors, this report is a signal to review portfolios. Companies with a clear AI governance structure are seeing operating margin growth averaging 22% above the market. In a world where efficiency is squeezed to hundredths of a percent, having an experienced CAIO is becoming as imperative as having a CFO.
We are entering a decade where the competition will not be between humans or machines, but between management models of their symbiosis, IBM analysts state.









