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AI Doesn’t Fix Strategy — It Exposes It

1st May 2026
The assumption that generative AI will improve decision-making across organisations is becoming harder to defend. Evidence highlighted by MIT Sloan Management Review suggests that AI does not lift performance evenly. Instead, it amplifies existing differences in judgment, strengthening organisations that already make good decisions while accelerating errors in those that do not. The implication is strategic, not technical. AI is not a shortcut to better outcomes. It is a test of how decisions are made. The Strategic Reality Behind AI Adoption A field experiment examining the use of generative AI as a business adviser produced an outcome that runs counter to the prevailing narrative. Some users improved performance. Others saw it deteriorate. The dividing line was not access to the technology, but the ability to evaluate the quality of the advice it produced. This reframes how AI should be understood at an executive level. It is often positioned as a capability that reduces the need for experience or expertise. In practice, it increases their importance. By compressing the distance between information and action, AI accelerates decision-making. That acceleration is only an advantage when judgment is already strong. Where it is weak, the same speed increases the likelihood of error. For strategy teams, this represents a structural shift. Competitive advantage is no longer defined primarily by access to tools or data. It is defined by how effectively an organisation interprets and applies what those tools produce. AI does not replace judgment. It exposes its quality. When Speed Becomes a Risk One of the least visible consequences of AI adoption is the compression of decision cycles. Tasks that once required iteration, discussion, and validation can now be completed almost instantly. While this creates efficiency, it also removes the friction that historically acted as a safeguard against poor decisions. In disciplined organisations, this acceleration improves performance. Assumptions are tested more quickly, alternatives are explored more broadly, and execution follows with greater confidence. In less structured environments, the same acceleration produces the opposite effect. Decisions are made quickly but without sufficient scrutiny, increasing exposure to avoidable mistakes. The risk is not that AI produces incorrect outputs. It is that those outputs are acted on with a level of confidence they do not deserve. When that happens, the organisation is not making better decisions faster. It is making worse decisions faster, with fewer opportunities to correct them. This is the point at which AI shifts from being a productivity tool to a source of strategic risk. The technology does not need to fail to create damage. It only needs to be used without sufficient challenge. Why Some Organisations Pull Further Ahead The divergence created by AI is not accidental. Strong organisations already possess structured decision-making processes, internal challenge mechanisms, and clear accountability. When AI is introduced into this environment, it enhances those strengths. It allows faster iteration without undermining control. Weaker organisations lack these foundations. Decision-making may already be inconsistent, overly centralised, or insufficiently challenged. Introducing AI into such systems does not resolve those weaknesses. It amplifies them. Decisions are accelerated, but not improved, and errors are propagated more quickly through the organisation. Over time, this creates a widening gap. Organisations that can interpret AI outputs effectively gain both speed and accuracy. Those that cannot may gain speed but lose control. AI does not distribute advantage evenly. It reallocates it toward organisations that are already capable of using it well. What This Means for CEOs and Strategy Teams For leadership teams, the critical question is no longer whether to adopt AI, but whether the organisation is equipped to use it without increasing risk. That requires a shift in how AI is positioned internally. Treating AI as an adviser creates exposure. Treating it as an input to structured decision-making maintains control. The distinction is operational, not philosophical. It determines whether the organisation benefits from AI or becomes dependent on it. In practice, this means preserving—and in some cases strengthening—the mechanisms that govern decisions. Outputs must be interrogated, assumptions tested, and conclusions debated in the same way as any other strategic input. Speed cannot be allowed to bypass scrutiny. The organisations that extract the most value from AI are not those that move fastest. They are those that maintain discipline as speed increases. That discipline becomes the differentiator. The Broader Strategic Implication AI is not a neutral productivity tool. It reshapes how advantage is created and sustained. Organisations that invest in decision quality—through leadership capability, structured processes, and internal challenge—are positioned to benefit. Those that focus primarily on deployment may find that AI exposes underlying weaknesses rather than compensating for them. This dynamic is likely to reinforce differences across industries. High-performing organisations extend their advantage through better use of AI. Lower-performing organisations experience greater volatility in outcomes as flawed decisions are made more quickly and with greater confidence. The long-term implication is not that AI changes who has access to capability. It changes who can use that capability effectively. Generative AI does not democratise performance. It amplifies it. The belief that access to AI will close gaps between organisations is increasingly difficult to sustain. Instead, the evidence points in the opposite direction. AI rewards strong judgment and penalises weak decision-making. For CEOs and strategy teams, the implication is direct. The real investment is not in AI itself, but in the organisational capability required to use it effectively. Without that, AI does not solve strategic problems. It makes them more visible—and more consequential.

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