Business
Why True Technology Leadership Requires More Than Bold Ambitions
In an era where artificial intelligence dominates boardroom conversations and quantum computing looms on the horizon, a sobering reality check has arrived. KPMG’s newly released Global Tech Report 2026, drawing insights from 2,500 technology executives across 27 countries, paints a picture of an enterprise landscape caught between transformative ambition and operational paralysis.
Key Points
- Rapid AI Integration : 88% of organizations are already embedding AI agents into their workflows, signaling a significant global shift from pilot programs to operational scaling.
- Adaptive Strategic Planning : Because the fast pace of innovation can make tech plans obsolete before implementation, organizations are moving toward flexible, agile strategies that prioritize speed and enterprise-wide coordination.
- Workforce Evolution : High-performing organizations project that by 2027, tech teams will likely consist of a small permanent human core orchestrating expansive, AI-augmented ecosystems.
- Redefining ROI : Realizing value from tech investments remains a challenge due to varying organizational readiness; executives are encouraged to update KPIs to better capture the indirect and unique business value generated by AI.
The central thesis is unambiguous: organizations stand at the threshold of what KPMG terms the “Intelligence Age,” yet most remain fundamentally unprepared for what this transition demands.
The Maturity Paradox: Plans Without Progress
The report’s most striking revelation concerns what analysts describe as the “maturity paradox.” Despite unprecedented investment in emerging technologies, most organizations find themselves trapped in perpetual experimentation mode. The journey from pilot programs to scaled implementation remains frustratingly elusive for the majority.
- Barriers to Maturity : Despite bold ambitions, many organizations are hindered by the “intensifying challenges” of tech debt, rising cost pressures, and a lack of specialized talent.
- Future Tech Horizons : Beyond current AI, leaders are urged to prepare for the disruptive potential of quantum computing—which demands superior security—as well as the unpredictable implications of AGI and Artificial Superintelligence (ASI).
- Data-Driven Insights : The report’s findings are based on a comprehensive survey of 2,500 senior tech executives across 27 countries and eight major industries, reflecting a global consensus on the need for digital maturity.
This is not a failure of vision. Technology executives understand the stakes. What they are grappling with is something far more insidious: the intensifying challenges of technical debt, relentless cost pressures, and acute talent shortages that collectively function as gravitational forces, pulling organizations back toward the status quo even as they strain toward innovation.
The data is particularly revealing. While organizations have bold plans to “uplift maturity in 2026,” the obstacles preventing them from realizing their tech goals suggest that aspiration and achievement exist in parallel universes for many enterprises.
The ROI Reckoning: Beyond the Vanity Metrics
Perhaps no finding demands more critical attention than the report’s examination of return on investment. The technology sector has long suffered from measurement myopia, an obsession with deployment metrics, user adoption rates, and feature releases that obscure the fundamental question: Are organizations actually creating value?
KPMG’s research suggests that ROI on tech investments varies dramatically based on factors including readiness, diligence, organizational agility, and most crucially, organizational courage. The report explicitly challenges executives to move beyond conventional ROI measurements, particularly for AI tools, where traditional metrics often fail to capture the complexity of value generation.
This represents a mature acknowledgment of an uncomfortable truth: the typical pattern of ROI for AI initiatives frequently involves being based on indirect and often misleading benefits rather than demonstrable business outcomes. For an industry that prides itself on data-driven decision-making, this admission of measurement inadequacy is both refreshing and alarming.
The Agentic Revolution: From Pilot to Permanence
The most forward-looking element of KPMG’s analysis centers on what Zack Kass, former Head of Go-to-Market at OpenAI, describes as a “sharp move from pilots to ROI in the next year.” According to the research, 88 percent of organizations are already embedding AI agents into workflows, products, and value streams.
But here is where the analysis becomes genuinely provocative: Kass predicts that by 2027, high-performing organizations expect approximately half of their tech teams to consist of permanent human staff, with the remainder orchestrated through small, durable human cores managing large AI-augmented ecosystems.
This is not an incremental change. It represents a fundamental reimagining of how technology organizations function. Yet the report stops short of addressing the profound ethical, cultural, and practical implications of this transition. Questions remain about workforce reskilling, career progression in hybrid ecosystems, and who bears the social cost of this transformation.
Strategic Agility in an Age of Constant Obsolescence
The report correctly identifies that with the fast pace of innovation, tech plans are often obsolete before implementation. This observation points to a strategic crisis that transcends technology: how can organizations plan for a future that refuses to remain fixed long enough to be planned for?
KPMG’s prescription of coordinating investment priorities across the enterprise, building clarity around strategic decision-making, creating cultures that leverage the best of technology, and ensuring the foundations of data and resilience are sound, but may prove insufficient. These recommendations assume a stable enough environment for coordination and planning to remain meaningful activities.
What may be required instead is a more radical reimagining: organizations that treat strategy as a continuous adaptive process rather than an annual planning ritual. Technology leadership must become less about selecting the right technologies and more about building organizational systems capable of rapid experimentation, learning, and adaptation.
The Quantum and AGI Horizon
The report’s discussion of emerging technologies beyond current AI capabilities, particularly quantum computing and artificial general intelligence, highlights an essential but often overlooked leadership responsibility: preparing for discontinuities.
As KPMG notes, agentic AI commands attention while quantum provides immense computing power with security implications. Meanwhile, AGI and artificial superintelligence represent possibilities that are simultaneously distant and potentially transformative. The challenge for technology leaders is maintaining focus on near-term execution while building organizational flexibility for technological shifts that remain fundamentally unpredictable.
Conclusion: Leadership Beyond Technology
What emerges from KPMG’s comprehensive research is a portrait of technology leadership that transcends technical competence. Success in the Intelligence Age demands the ability to balance ambition with pragmatism, to measure value with sophistication, to build adaptive strategies in unstable environments, and to prepare organizations for futures that may look radically different from the present.
The executives surveyed for this report understand these challenges intellectually. The question that will define the next several years is whether they can translate that understanding into organizational reality, moving from plans on paper to sustained competitive advantage in practice.
For those waiting for certainty before acting, KPMG’s research offers a clear message: the time for tentative experimentation has passed. The Intelligence Age is not approaching. It has arrived. The only question remaining is whether organizations will lead, follow, or become obsolete.