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A recent Pearl Meyer study has uncovered a troubling misalignment at the top of corporate leadership: boards of directors believe the C-suite owns AI strategy development, while senior executives argue that responsibility isn't clearly theirs. This disconnect represents more than a simple miscommunication—it signals a fundamental governance problem that could hamper Atlanta companies' ability to compete in an AI-driven economy.
The research suggests that the real bottleneck preventing successful AI implementation isn't technological at all. Rather, it's an organizational and leadership dysfunction that leaves strategic decisions in limbo. For Atlanta-based companies across industries—from logistics to healthcare to financial services—this ambiguity about who drives AI direction could result in delayed adoption, wasted resources, and competitive disadvantages.
According to the survey findings, this gap indicates that some senior executive teams are struggling to function cohesively around one of today's most critical business imperatives. When boards and C-suite leaders can't align on strategic ownership, it creates cascading problems throughout the organization, from IT implementation to budget allocation to talent recruitment.
For Atlanta business leaders, the takeaway is clear: resolving this leadership clarity issue must come first. Companies that establish explicit accountability for AI strategy—whether owned by a Chief Technology Officer, Chief Digital Officer, or the CEO directly—will likely move faster than competitors still debating who's in charge. Getting alignment at the board and executive level isn't just good governance; it's becoming a competitive necessity.



