The generative AI boom has triggered a wave of enterprise experimentation. From proof-of-concepts to customer-facing AI Agents, which can be launched at pace but too often in isolation. This comes as MIT’s latest report finds that only 5% of Generative AI pilots are successful, with the majority failing due to poor integration with enterprise systems and in-house implementations without engagement with expert vendors.
As adoption grows, so does the call for accountability. Control and centralisation is more important than ever. Siloed operations and experimentation pilots have meant that there are a trail of disconnected tools, incomplete experiments and sometimes confusion within enterprises of where AI is being used and who is using it, meaning it can’t be governed effectively.
Now is the time for enterprises to take stock and set themselves up for a long-term, successful future in applying AI where it can make the most difference. The state of play today shows where clear changes are needed.
AI Islands
In a recent report from Boston Consulting Group and Kore.ai, 80% of AI leaders say they now favour platform-based strategies over scattered deployments. These platforms are not just about efficiency; they’re quickly becoming the only viable model for visibility, scalability and governance.
The consequences of fragmentation are starting to show. CIOs and CTOs are sounding the alarm on siloed AI solutions that make it harder to measure impact, manage risk, or move quickly. This is often the case when AI tools and solutions are implemented in-house and without proven expertise.
These ‘AI islands’ are hard to govern, expensive to integrate and nearly impossible to scale responsibly. More than half surveyed in the report say current AI solutions are slowing them down and nearly three-quarters highlight explainability and compliance as top concerns. Clearly, connecting these AI islands together via a common platform can offer more long-term benefits such as better governance, faster time to market, and cost consolidation.
Regulation Demands New Architecture
Where governance could have been considered a final step by some, it now has to be a design principle from the outset. Transparency, auditability, and oversight must be built into the very fabric of how AI is developed, deployed and monitored.
Take the EU AI Act for example, the world’s first broad AI law, now applying to general-purpose AI models from August 2nd, 2025. The rules aim to boost transparency, safety and accountability across the AI value chain while preserving innovation.
According to the BCG report, 74% of leaders believe new regulations will significantly influence how they roll out AI across their organisations. And for good reason. Fragmented systems don’t just introduce inefficiency, they create gaps that regulators, stakeholders and customers are not ready to accept.
For all the talk of regulation as a constraint, it’s also an opportunity. Regulations should be seen as catalysts, rather than roadblocks. Companies that ensure governance is hard-wired into their AI projects don’t just avoid risk, they create greater trust. And this means greater adoption. This is what leaders need to see, as increased adoption of AI products ensures sustainable, long-term growth.
Enterprises in industries holding sensitive and personal data like BFSI, healthcare and retail, are already adopting a platform-based approach. Not only does this ensure integration across the business but also means it future proofs compliance, meeting industry and government regulated standards today but also building in parameters for upcoming regulations.
Gaining Control
Adopting a platform model doesn’t limit creativity. And it doesn’t mean sacrificing flexibility. Instead of juggling multiple tools, you get one place to plug in what you’ve built and get the best of what’s out there. By running all of your AI capabilities under one unified platform and set of guardrails, your teams across the organisation move forward with one framework, which means, they move faster, make quicker decisions and have a clear understanding of what is – and isn’t – working.
Most importantly, a platform turns compliance into a competitive and operational advantage. You can swap models, scale pilots and grow without silos tripping you up, and bring centralised control. This momentum is crucial for scaling and growing an organisation. Platforms create the foundation to scale AI responsibly and effectively and that’s key for future-proofing AI projects and creating impact that matters.
- Data & AI
- Digital Strategy