A.I. in the Workplace


Do You Need a Chief AI Officer? How AI Is Reshaping Corporate Boardrooms

As artificial intelligence transforms businesses at breakneck speed, a new C-suite role is emerging: the Chief AI Officer (CAIO). According to a fresh IBM report, 76% of over 2,000 organizations surveyed have now appointed a CAIO to lead their AI initiatives — a sharp rise from just 26% in 2025.


The findings highlight how AI is not only disrupting workplaces but also rewriting the rules at the very top of companies.


 AI-Driven Organizational Shifts

Since ChatGPT’s launch in 2022, AI has triggered widespread layoffs across industries, particularly in tech. Yet the same technology is forcing companies to rethink executive leadership. 


Analysts describe the current wave as potentially the biggest organizational change since the industrial and digital revolutions. “AI is driving what may be the largest organizational shift since the industrial and digital revolutions,” said Vivek Lath, partner at McKinsey & Company.


The IBM report also points to a surprising beneficiary in the C-suite: 59% of respondents expect the influence of the Chief Human Resources Officer (CHRO) to increase as AI adoption accelerates.


 Clearing Up the Confusion

The rapid rise of AI has created ambiguity around who owns it in the executive ranks. Traditional roles — Chief Technology Officer (CTO), Chief Information Officer (CIO), and Chief Data Officer (CDO) — often overlap, leaving gaps in accountability for critical AI issues like governance, infrastructure, integration, and workflow redesign.


This has prompted many firms to create dedicated CAIO positions. Banks such as HSBC and Lloyds Banking Group have already filled the role this year.


However, not everyone believes the CAIO title will become universal. “Have we seen chief AI officers? Yes. Do I expect that to go mainstream? No, probably not,” said Jonathan Tabah, advisory director at Gartner. He notes that creating new C-suite positions is expensive and only makes sense for organizations aiming to lead in innovation.


IBM argues that CAIOs help companies take calculated risks while maintaining control through clear targets and guidelines. McKinsey emphasizes that centralized coordination of AI efforts matters more than the specific title. Experts like Randy Bean, author of the 2026 AI & Data Leadership Executive Benchmark Survey, suggest the CAIO role may prove transitional — eventually folding into other executive responsibilities as AI matures.


 The Rising Importance of HR

Cultural and human factors remain the biggest barriers to AI success. In Bean’s survey, 93.2% of respondents identified “cultural challenges” — not technology — as the primary obstacle.


Omdia’s Lian Jye Su highlights that Chief HR Officers are uniquely positioned to handle talent acquisition, training, and improving employee AI literacy. Gartner’s Tabah sees AI automation as a chance for HR to move from administrative tasks to true strategic leadership — though he cautions that poorly positioned HR departments risk becoming even more operational and automated.


The Human Impact

While C-suite executives are largely insulated from immediate AI disruption due to the strategic and relational nature of their roles, they bear responsibility for managing its broader effects. Tech layoffs have already been significant: over 101,000 jobs cut globally year-to-date, according to Layoffs.fyi, with major waves at Meta, Microsoft, and others.


Consulting firm Bain & Company estimates that software-as-a-service companies could generate nearly $100 billion in additional margins by automating coordination work and converting labor costs into software investments.


The challenge for leaders is balancing efficiency gains with workforce transitions. As one Bain consultant noted, the conversation should also focus on the productivity upside: AI is enabling more work to get done, potentially freeing people for higher-value activities.

 Whether or not every company needs a dedicated Chief AI Officer, AI is forcing a fundamental rethink of leadership structures, talent strategies, and organizational culture. The winners will be those who integrate the technology thoughtfully rather than treating it as just another IT project.