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Data and AI

Harnessing the value of AI: Unlocking scalable advantage

As organizations shift from isolated pilots to enterprise-wide deployments of generative and agentic AI, they are unlocking transformative benefits in innovation and productivity.

But mainstream adoption is bringing new challenges related to cost containment, workforce adaptation, governance, and sustainability.

Harnessing the value of AI: Unlocking scalable advantage, the third edition in the Capgemini Research Institute’s annual research series on AI technologies, explores strategies for how organizations can scale AI implementation responsibly, ethically, and effectively. The research brief is based on findings from a global survey of 1,100 leaders at organizations with annual revenue above $1 billion across 15 countries. Key findings include:

  • Gen AI adoption is now mainstream, surging from 6% in 2023 to 30% in 2025. Today, 93% of organizations are exploring or enabling Gen AI capabilities – yet while benefits are rising, cost concerns persist.
  • AI agents are gaining ground, with 14% of organizations implementing them at partial or full scale, and 23% running pilots. Of the organizations already scaling AI agents, nearly 45% are piloting or scaling multi-agent systems.
  • AI is evolving from tool to teammate. Nearly six in 10 organizations are planning to integrate AI as augmenting or autonomous collaborators within the next year – yet most are underprepared for this shift.
  • Trust and governance are lagging: 71% of organizations say they cannot fully trust autonomous AI agents for enterprise use. While 46% have governance policies in place, adherence remains low.
  • AI’s environmental impact is under scrutiny. Only one in five organizations measures its Gen AI environmental footprint, though sustainability measures – like using smaller task-specific models – are gaining traction.

The new research brief offers actionable insights for business and technology leaders across industries and functions. To deliver business value and scale AI responsibly and effectively, organizations must:

  • Architect for scalability by redesigning processes for AI integration, and embracing “platformization” for enterprise-wide deployment.
  • Reinforce trust through governance by defining clear scopes for AI execution, establishing cross-functional governance with ethical oversight, and strengthening data management and traceability.
  • Design human-AI collaboration models through prioritizing reskilling and cultural transformation, and adapting workflows and performance metrics for hybrid teams.

To discover how organizations can move beyond experimentation to scaled, ethical, and high-value AI deployment, download the Harnessing the value of AI research brief today.

Meet our experts

Caroline Wilhelmsen

Caroline Wilhelmsen

Vice President – Head of Insights and Data Norway, Capgemini
Caroline is an experienced project manager with a burning commitment to digital and innovative solutions to streamline and improve. She is process-oriented, analytical, and innovative with a genuine commitment to getting people and teams to perform in the best possible way. Today Caroline leads a unit of 140 consultants where they assist customers with how they can become more data- and insight-driven.
Alexander Fritsch

Alexander Fritsch

Vice President at Capgemini Invent Sweden-Finland
With 25+ years of experience, Alexander Fritch is Vice President at Capgemini Invent Sweden and Finland. He is an experienced project, program, and business unit manager with extensive knowledge of digital, data & analytics strategy, transformation and service delivery across CRM and much more.

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