Rushing ahead of plan: 61% of CEOs say boards are pushing AI too fast
A BCG survey revealed a rift between CEOs and boards: 61% of top executives say boards are rushing AI transformation. The study covered 625 business leaders at

Boston Consulting Group conducted a global survey of 625 leaders and identified a sharp divide: 61% of CEOs believe that their boards of directors are rushing too fast with AI implementation. This disagreement could significantly hinder successful digital transformation.
Scale and essence of the research
BCG's "Split Decisions" study covered 351 CEOs and 274 board members from companies with annual revenue of $100 million and above. The survey was conducted globally and revealed a consistent pattern: the majority of CEOs express concern about the pace at which their boards of directors are implementing AI initiatives. This research comes at a time when business pressure to implement AI is reaching a peak. Companies are competing for AI talent, investing in infrastructure, and trying to reimagine their business models. But the pace of implementation is becoming a stumbling block between strategy (board) and operational reality (CEO).
Two different perspectives
The difference in perception is rooted in different viewpoints. CEOs, who manage day-to-day operations, see current limitations: lack of AI talent, organizational readiness, real system capabilities, employee resistance. Board members, focused on long-term strategy and competitiveness, push for faster adoption, fearing falling behind the market. This conflict is particularly acute when AI becomes an existential challenge for industries. Boards see a "window of opportunity," CEOs see a "window of risk." Board members fear missing the moment, CEOs fear breaking the organization in a rush.
Real risks of hasty implementation
The history of corporate transformation is full of examples where hasty decisions led to failures. Rushing AI transformation threatens:
- Failed pilots that undermine team confidence in the technology
- Insufficient employee training and clear resistance to change
- Improper AI integration into existing processes and systems
- Loss of talent among people displaced by automation without support
- Unforeseen costs of reworking poorly planned initiatives
CEOs emphasize that transformation requires time, proper preparation and sequence of steps, not rushing for speed.
What it means
The divide identified by BCG points to the need for dialogue between CEOs and boards. Successful AI transformation is not about maximum speed, but about smart balance between ambitions and reality. A company that manages the transition carefully and thoughtfully can outpace competitors through better AI integration and organizational adaptation to change.