Your organization is almost certainly using Artificial Intelligence (AI), but can you say what it is returning? For most mid-market leaders, the honest answer is “no”; they can’t prove AI is driving ROI, and that's the problem.
Executives know they need to adopt AI to stay competitive, and the response has been a surge of ad-hoc tool adoption across departments: intense excitement and effort, albeit disconnected systems, unmanaged cybersecurity risks, and no way to measure what any of it produces.
Grant Thornton's 2026 AI Impact Survey Report has a name for this condition: the "AI proof gap," which identifies the phenomenon of companies deploying AI they cannot explain, measure, or defend. The survey quantifies the problem. It found:
This is not one firm's finding. Boston Consulting Group's Where's the Value in AI? found that only 26% of companies had built the capabilities to move beyond proofs of concept, and that roughly 70% of implementation challenges were people and process problems rather than technology. McKinsey's State of AI survey reported that while nearly nine in ten organizations now use AI somewhere, only 39% see any positive impact on operating earnings.
The data confirms what we see in the field: strategy and governance do not slow down innovation.
A structured AI strategy gives your team the guardrails needed to move quickly and safely. One honest caveat, which the researchers themselves flag: these are correlational findings. A written strategy does not cause revenue growth by itself. Rather, a written strategy is a marker of the organizational discipline that, ultimately, goes on to drive revenue growth; and that discipline is buildable.
So, what actually constitutes a mature AI strategy? Moving from chaos to implemented outcomes requires an approach that goes beyond simply purchasing licenses. Keep reading to find out.
Read Also: Technology Stopped Being An IT Problem
A functional AI strategy is not an Information Technology (IT) roadmap. It's also not an AI policy. When we ask leaders whether they have an AI strategy, the most common answer is "yes, we have an acceptable use policy." This answer is incorrect.
A policy tells your people what they can and cannot do. A strategy, on the other hand, tells your business what AI is for. Many firms have the first and mistake it for the second. Moreover, a complete AI strategy looks like a business strategy fueled by technology, and it includes several non-negotiable components:
When these components are practically applied to a business, they force leadership teams to make definitive choices about their operating models. A true strategy answers questions such as:
Only after you have answered the questions that matter to your business should you select tools.
Building this strategy does not require a massive, monolithic blueprint. GBQ's Business Technology Solutions team helps mid-market organizations tackle it modularly, through a disciplined four-step approach:
We are past the point where playing with tools is an acceptable strategy. The organizations reporting revenue growth from AI in every survey cited above made their decisions before they scaled. Start with the decisions. The tools will still be there when you are done.
GBQ's Business Technology Solutions practice empowers the growth of our clients across six disciplines: risk management, cybersecurity, IT governance, AI and automation, data and analytics, and business systems.
If this article raised questions that you cannot yet answer about your own AI strategy, the first place to start is with a conversation. GBQ’s AI advisory services allow us to assess where your organization stands today, prioritize use cases worth your investment, and help build the governance that lets you prove what AI is returning.
To continue the conversation, schedule time with Doug Davidson, director of GBQ’s Business Technology Solutions practice. Or, contact him directly at ddavidson@gbq.com.
Net Effect is a biweekly column written by Doug Davidson, director of the firm's Business Technology Solutions, published in the firm's Bottomline newsletter. Email ddavidson@gbq.com to have your technology questions addressed in a future column.