Nat Natarajan, Chief Operations Officer, G-P.getty​Every business leader I speak with has an AI strategy. Few have one that delivers.The chasm between AI strategy and realized AI value is the defining corporate challenge of 2026. This isn’t a technology failure—the tools have never been more capable—it’s an execution failure. Organizations are deploying AI without cross-functional alignment, building governance that creates bottlenecks and underestimating the psychological safety required for teams to offload work to a machine.At G-P, we built G-P Gia to solve high-stakes global HR compliance. In this field, a hallucination isn’t a quirk; it's a legal and financial liability. Our experience has made one thing clear: AI success requires creating the right systems and conditions that allow the technology to perform reliably at scale.The Strategy-Execution GapThe most common mistake organizations make is conflating AI adoption with AI strategy. Rushing to deploy creates fragmented implementations, anemic adoption and a fundamental lack of trust. G-P’s research confirms this: 56% of U.S. executives report that a surplus of AI tools is causing organizational confusion rather than clarity.AI is not one-size-fits-all. A sophisticated strategy identifies high-impact AI use cases and builds the necessary organizational foundation before the plan is written. That is the difference between a perpetual proof of concept and a successful, transformative deployment.Cross-Functional Buy-In Is A PrerequisiteWhen we built Gia, bringing HR and legal into the room on day one was not a courtesy; it was a strategic necessity. Their expertise replaced technical assumptions with verified institutional knowledge, ensuring the product was market-ready from an integrity standpoint.We frequently see engineering teams build sophisticated AI that legal won't clear, or finance teams implement AI tools that operations simply won’t use. The technology may be flawless, but without institutional change management in place, it remains a nonstarter.Cross-functional integration has to happen at the design stage, not the deployment stage. This includes defining success metrics together and surfacing the concerns of skeptics before they become blockers. Governance That Enables SpeedMost governance frameworks are designed to mitigate risk by slowing everything down. Effective governance does the opposite. It centralizes the “what” and the “why” while empowering teams on the “how.” At G-P, our AI Council conducts monthly policy reviews to keep our guardrails as agile as the technology. The objective is not to stifle experimentation, but to make it safe. When teams understand what requires escalation and what can be tested in a lower-risk environment, they move faster. Organizations that get this balance right can outpace competitors paralyzed by uncertainty.Designing For TrustThe AI industry often overlooks a fundamental human truth: People do not trust black box technology they cannot explain or verify.In regulated, high-stakes domains, confidence is not enough. Trust is earned through transparency, showing your work, citing your sources and making the reasoning process visible. An AI system that presents every output with the same level of authority, regardless of its underlying certainty, is a liability, not an asset.The leaders in the AI race are not necessarily the ones with the largest budgets or most sophisticated models. They are the ones doing the rigorous work of data verification and explainability.​Closing The GapAI’s potential is not up for debate. What remains to be seen is which organizations have the internal discipline to realize it.Cross-functional alignment, high-velocity governance and trust-first design are the new infrastructure of the modern enterprise. The future of work isn't just the machine; it's the partnership between human and machine. The leaders who master that partnership will be the ones who remove the barriers to growth and unlock the future of work.​Forbes Technology Council is an invitation-only community for world-class CIOs, CTOs and technology executives. Do I qualify?