CTO confidence in scaling AI falls to 48%: report

CALIFORNIA, UNITED STATES — Chief technology officer (CTO) confidence in scaling AI has dropped to 48% in 2026 — down from 82% two years ago — marking the third consecutive year of decline even as enterprise AI investment continues to grow, according to a survey of 500 chief technology officers by Akkodis, part of the Adecco Group, Staffing Industry reports.
The problem is no longer access to AI — it’s knowing what to do with it
“What we’re seeing now is not a slowdown in AI adoption, but a moment of realism,” said Jo Debecker, President and CEO of Akkodis.
CTOs remain broadly committed to AI — 40% cite agentic AI as the most impactful technology trend shaping organizations in 2026 — but the gap between investment and scalable deployment is widening, with confidence falling from 62% in 2025 to 48% in 2026.
The most impactful constraint is not AI itself but organizational readiness: enterprises are being held back less by access to AI tools than by the complexity of integrating those systems across workflows, enterprise architecture, and decision-making structures.
Leadership, governance, and worker trust are each failing the scaling test
The report found organizations are “constrained less by access to technology than by the complexity of integrating AI” across enterprise systems — a barrier that has grown faster than adoption itself.
Only 44% of organizations report having leadership with sufficient AI understanding to make informed deployment decisions, while just 46% have established responsible AI frameworks.
The skills gap is the most cited barrier to scaling: 32% of CTOs name lack of in-house AI skills as the primary constraint, followed by ROI uncertainty at 31% and insufficient internal business urgency at 27%.
Only 21% of CTOs report that AI has resulted in workforce reduction — a figure that challenges the narrative that AI investment automatically translates to headcount cuts.
Fifty-seven percent of CTOs are now using AI to determine which tasks are best suited to humans versus machines — but only 36% report satisfied workforce trust, meaning organizations are performing this governance function without the people infrastructure it requires.
For BPO and offshore staffing providers, the CTO confidence gap is both a warning and a commercial opening. The integration complexity blocking enterprise AI scaling — skills deficits, governance gaps, ROI uncertainty — is precisely what specialist offshore teams are built to absorb as managed service mandates.
Providers that package AI implementation, governance, and workforce reskilling as a bundled offering will find more enterprise demand than providers waiting for clients to figure it out in-house.

Independent




