Culture Office

The AI boom is outrunning corporate oversight



Companies are racing to adopt AI — but most couldn't pass a governance audit if they had to. A widening gap between deployment and accountability is building up legal, regulatory, and operational risk just as AI begins making high-stakes decisions at work.


By the numbers
~8 in 10
Executives who say their company couldn't pass an AI governance audit
7%
Of AI pilot organizations, "very confident" they'd pass an audit in 90 days
48%
Of boards that approved major AI investments but set no governance expectations

The stakes are rising fast. The same survey found that companies with fully integrated AI are nearly four times more likely to report revenue growth compared to those still piloting (58% vs. 15%). That gap creates intense pressure to move fast — and skip the guardrails.

"Competitive FOMO is real. The urgency to deploy has outpaced the urgency to create guardrails, to govern, to be compliant."

— Tom Puthiyamadam, Managing Partner of Advisory Services, Grant Thornton

The problem runs all the way to the boardroom. Three-quarters of boards have signed off on major AI investments — but nearly half haven't set governance expectations, and 46% haven't integrated AI risk oversight programs into company operations.

The urgency is compounded by the shift toward agentic AI — systems that operate independently on tasks without constant human prompting. Unlike conventional tools, agents require company-specific rules and standards to ensure they stay aligned with business values and don't generate costly mistakes at scale.


"Governance is foundational — but it's also becoming a competitive moat."

— Navrina Singh, CEO, CredoAI

The message from governance experts is consistent: don't wait for an incident. Companies that invest in controls, documentation, and continuous testing now will be better positioned when regulators and auditors come knocking — and when their own AI agents start making decisions that matter.

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