AI has moved beyond the proof of concept—it’s now the proof of imagination. The next phase isn’t about smarter models; it’s about smarter organizations that can evolve as fast as the technology does.
Slalom AI Research Report
The ambition to execution gap is changing
Closing the gap: From dissonance to disruption
Leaders are bullish about AI—spending more, moving faster—but outcomes aren’t keeping pace. Real progress takes more than pilots and proof of productivity. It requires turning ambition into action that can scale.
The data points to four key shifts that separate those still experimenting with AI from those delivering results:
- Turn confidence into capability. Confidence in AI is growing, but many teams lack the skills and systems to make it real. Reskilling at scale is the only way to close the talent divide.
- Modernize without compromise. Legacy systems are holding back adoption. Until companies modernize, the most ambitious AI strategies will remain stuck in pilot mode.
- Redesign, don’t retrofit. Tacking AI onto outdated processes delivers diminishing returns. Real transformation comes from rethinking how work gets done from the ground up.
- Go beyond efficiency to excel. Efficiency keeps you afloat; differentiation buys time. Competitive advantage comes from using it to drive reinvention, not just optimization.
“AI has become a test of leadership as much as technology,” says Minnick. “Disruption now depends on execution—on leaders willing to bridge the distance between vision and reality, building systems as adaptive as their ambitions.”
Closing that gap is how progress happens: when vision aligns with structure, ambition drives action, and innovation leads to impact
Methodology
The data in this report was gathered from an online survey of 2,000 business and technology leaders and practitioners conducted in August 2025. Respondents were based across five geographies—the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, and Ireland—and represented organizations in financial services, healthcare, life sciences, manufacturing and mobility, media and communications, public and social impact, retail and consumer goods, and technology and professional services. Participating companies reported annual revenues ranging from $500 million to more than $10 billion, with nearly half (49%) between $1 billion and $5 billion.
Contributors
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