Generative AI has crossed an important threshold. The vast majority (96%) of enterprise IT leaders report that they view GenAI as a strategic priority, on par with mission-critical systems such as ERP and CRM.
The technology is no longer confined to isolated pilots; organizations are already embedding GenAI into core enterprise workflows, software-as-a-service (SaaS) platforms, and decision-making processes, according to a Foundry global survey of 300 IT leaders.1
This shift carries an important implication for CIOs: They can no longer treat AI as a one-off technology. It must be viewed as a long-term strategy and governed with the rigor applied to any other mission-critical system — operationalized through a platform operating model that ensures consistent, sustainable execution across the enterprise.
From experimentation to enterprise discipline
Many organizations have already achieved some early GenAI success in production environments. For example, nearly two-thirds of the IT leaders surveyed said their organization is using GenAI in SaaS applications and has embedded the technology into enterprise workflows. They anticipate a range of positive outcomes from these deployments, including productivity and efficiency gains, improved customer experience, and revenue growth.
But early wins do not equal readiness at scale. As GenAI expands across teams, data sources, and hybrid environments, operational gaps begin to surface in cost predictability, governance, security, and resilience. IT leaders ranked their top three infrastructure challenges for scaling AI as:
- Security and compliance
- Performance and reliability
- Data management and integration
The research makes one point especially clear: CIOs who want GenAI to deliver sustained business value must apply the same enterprise discipline they use for mission-critical systems. This evolution requires a shift from managing individual AI experiments to governing a cohesive enterprise AI ecosystem featuring automated Day 2 operations, continuous performance monitoring, and enterprise-grade support across environments.
Without this discipline, GenAI initiatives risk fragmenting into disconnected tools that increase complexity, obscure accountability, and amplify operational risk.
Data sovereignty is not optional
As AI workloads scale, data governance becomes a board-level concern, not just a technical one. GenAI systems often rely on sensitive enterprise and customer data, which may be subject to strict regulatory, contractual, or geographic constraints.
Enterprise AI platforms must therefore enforce data residency, respect regional sovereignty, and give organizations explicit control over where data is processed and how models interact with it. This is especially critical in global enterprises operating across jurisdictions with different regulatory regimes.
For CIOs, governance is no longer just about compliance. By solving for data sovereignty now, they will help build and maintain trust — internally and externally — as AI becomes more deeply embedded in how the business operates.
Risk management must be built in, not bolted on
Traditional IT controls were designed for static applications. GenAI changes that model. AI systems evolve continuously, interact autonomously, and increasingly operate through agents that trigger actions without human intervention.
CIOs can no longer rely on manual oversight; AI must be embedded directly into the platform operating model, spanning data, models, infrastructure, and operations. That includes data lineage and provenance, role-based access controls, usage monitoring, model validation, and automated policy enforcement, consistently applied across hybrid cloud environments.
The goal is not to slow innovation but to make it safe, repeatable, and scalable. IT leaders who rely on manual oversight or fragmented controls will find that risk increases faster than value.
The CIO mandate is evolving
The takeaway for CIOs is straightforward: Running GenAI successfully requires a strategic operating model, not just one-off technology choices. To bridge this gap, IT leaders are looking for platforms that unify operations, governance, visibility, and automation. The goal is to implement an operating model that provides a path to scale AI with confidence without sacrificing control.
Download “The CIO’s guide to unlocking scale with enterprise-grade GenAI” — which includes deeper analysis of the Foundry research. It explores how enterprise leaders are approaching GenAI readiness, governance, and scale and what separates early success from long-term business impact.
[1] Foundry Market Pulse survey, Dec. 2025, of 301 IT leaders in North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific. Conducted on behalf of Nutanix, Inc.
Read More from This Article: The CIO remit: Treat GenAI as a mission-critical enterprise app
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