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The hidden ROI of AI: What leaders should actually measure

April 20, 2026
in News
The hidden ROI of AI: What leaders should actually measure

The promise of AI seems almost unlimited. Organizations worldwide are expanding access, investing heavily, and launching pilots at speed. Despite this optimism, the reality is more complex: the hardest work is moving AI pilots into production and measuring success beyond immediate financial returns. Deloitte has seen this dynamic first-hand: broad access is necessary, but the real value comes when AI is embedded into governed, day-to-day workflows that produce usable outputs.

Deloitte’s 2026 State of AI in the Enterprise: The untapped edge report highlights this challenge. While 54% of organizations expect to move 40% or more of their AI experiments into production within the next three to six months, only 25% have reached that milestone today. This gap between aspiration and achievement isn’t a failure of technology or vision; it reflects the critical importance of governance.

Why pilots fail to scale

The proof-of-concept trap is real. A pilot can succeed with a small team, clean data, and an isolated environment – but production presents a different challenge. It demands infrastructure investment, integration with legacy systems, security audits, compliance checks, and ongoing maintenance, each of which requires significantly more resources and coordination. Models that perform flawlessly in testing often stumble when exposed to real-world edge cases at scale, such as thousands of new and complex inputs from both internal and external stakeholders.  

Organizations are feeling pressure to implement AI quickly, but without a clearly defined strategy and a mature governance model, they are likely to experience pilot fatigue. By identifying high-risk applications, enforcing responsible design practices, and ensuring independent validation where appropriate, they will tackle the harder work of scaling existing successes rather than consistently funding new pilots.

The ROI reality check

The conversation around return on investment is another gap between expectations and results. While 66% of respondents are improving efficiency and productivity today, and 60% are already enhancing decision-making, revenue growth tells a different story: 74% of organizations hope to grow revenue through AI, compared to just 20% actually doing so today.

This doesn’t mean AI isn’t delivering value; it means the value is more nuanced than quarterly earnings reports might capture. The real-world impact is undeniable: 25% of leaders now say AI is having a transformative effect, more than double from 12% a year ago, with 84% increasing their AI budgets. In practice, early ROI often shows up as reclaimed capacity and faster cycle times. This is an outcome Deloitte saw after deploying Sidekick, an internal GenAI tool, with employees reporting they’ve saved 2 hours per week, allowing them to acquire new skills and engage in more meaningful, impactful work, such as creativity and relationship-building.

Beyond the numbers: qualitative value matters

The most successful organizations measure AI’s impact across multiple dimensions. While direct monetary gains and improved productivity matter, other facets such as faster decision-making cycles, improved customer interactions, reduced time-to-market for new products, and enhanced employee satisfaction also drive competitive advantage – even though they aren’t always easy to quantify.

Consider a manufacturer using AI agents to optimize the balance between cost and time-to-market in product development, or an air carrier using AI agents to help a customer make common transactions. These use cases deliver measurable value beyond simple cost reduction: AI agents free human talent to focus on higher-order activities, accelerate decision cycles, and build organizational capability. Deloitte has been encouraging clients to reimagine ways of working – rethinking how work gets done and how people and machines collaborate.

By reskilling employees and investing to ensure they adopt new AI tools, organizations can enable bigger, better, and smarter deliverables – and shift focus from routine tasks to strategic initiatives. That’s qualitative ROI; employees growing into higher-value roles, organizational capacity expanding, and competitive positioning strengthening.

The path forward

Moving from pilot to production requires treating AI as foundational rather than experimental. It demands that organizations invest not just in technology, but also in infrastructure, governance, talent redesign, and cultural readiness. Deloitte’s report shows that while 42% of companies believe their strategy is well-prepared for AI, only 20% feel equally confident about talent readiness.

Organizations serious about capturing AI’s value should treat pilots as stepping stones to production from the outset. They need empowered employees who become internal champions, role-specific hands-on training, and executive advocacy that drives adoption. They should establish governance frameworks before scaling – not after – that make oversight everyone’s role, embedding it in performance rubrics so that, as AI handles more tasks, humans take on active oversight. In parallel, they should measure success broadly, capturing both quantitative and qualitative returns.

The untapped edge of AI’s potential doesn’t lie in having the most pilots or the biggest budgets. It lies in bridging the gap from access to activation, from experimentation to operationalization, and from the technology’s potential to genuine enterprise value. That’s where the real ROI lives.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

The post The hidden ROI of AI: What leaders should actually measure appeared first on Fortune.

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