“Agentic AI could cause considerable job losses as routine knowledge-work tasks are automated, making reskilling and workforce redeployment an urgent board-level priority”, Khanna said. “The companies most admired a decade from now will use AI to move people into higher-value work, rather than simply cutting headcount”.
The report warns agentic AI, governance failures and workforce disruption will reshape enterprise strategy. Enterprise AI is now a board-level execution test.
The report sets out a clear message for enterprise leaders: the AI race is moving from experimentation to execution. Peak State Consulting says the companies that win will be those that can turn AI into measurable productivity, cost, speed and governance advantages.
Peak State Consulting identifies five requirements for successful enterprise AI deployment:
1. Board-level ownership and named executive accountability.
2. AI-ready data foundations.
3. Governance before scale.
4. Use cases prioritised by business value, not novelty.
5. Workforce reskilling and AI literacy.
The report warns that enterprises without these foundations will remain trapped in pilot programmes while competitors build production-scale advantage. “AI strategy without execution infrastructure is just a presentation,” said Khanna. “Boards need named ownership, measurable targets, governance controls and a disciplined path from pilot to production”.
Agentic AI could redefine enterprise software
Peak State Consulting forecasts that 50% of enterprise applications will embed AI agents by 2027. The report says this shift could be the most important change in enterprise software since cloud computing. AI agents will increasingly perform multi-step tasks across procurement, finance, customer service, software engineering, legal review, compliance and enterprise analytics. The report also warns that AI agents create new operational and cybersecurity risks because they can act inside enterprise systems.
“AI agents should be treated as privileged users, not harmless tools”, said Khanna. “They need permissions, audit logs, monitoring, escalation paths and clear limits on what they can do”.
AI governance may become a valuation issue
Peak State Consulting forecasts that enterprises with mature AI governance may command 15–25% valuation premiums by 2030. The report says investors are likely to differentiate between companies that can show measurable AI returns and those that only describe AI activity. By 2030, AI programme ROI may become a mandatory board-level reporting metric. “Investors will not reward vague AI narratives forever”, said Khanna. “They will ask how much is being invested, what is in production, what value is being created and what governance is in place”.
Governance failures expected to rise
Peak State Consulting forecasts that by 2027, 60% of enterprises will experience at least one significant AI-related governance failure. The report defines this as an incident causing material financial loss, regulatory enforcement, reputational damage or board-level intervention. Potential causes include model hallucinations in critical workflows, weak human oversight, privacy breaches, biased outputs, unmanaged AI agents and poor audit trails. The report says governance should be designed before AI systems are scaled.
“Governance is not a brake on AI”, said Khanna. “It is what allows AI to scale safely. Without governance, companies either move too slowly or create unacceptable risk”.
Data readiness remains the hidden constraint
The report says many enterprise AI programmes underestimate the importance of data. Peak State Consulting notes that data preparation typically consumes 40–60% of total AI implementation effort. Poor data quality, weak lineage, unclear access rights and fragmented systems remain major barriers to production deployment.
“Boards often ask which AI platform to buy”, said Khanna. “The better first question is whether their data is ready. AI built on weak data foundations will produce weak, unreliable or risky outcomes”.
Sovereign AI becomes a business risk
The report identifies sovereign AI as a major issue for multinational companies. Peak State Consulting says regulation, data residency, export controls, national AI strategies, cloud sovereignty and geopolitical competition are now shaping enterprise technology decisions.
The report says global companies may need multi-region AI architectures to comply with different regulatory and data requirements across the United States, Europe, China, India, the Middle East and other major markets. “Sovereign AI is no longer an abstract policy debate”, said Khanna. “It is a board-level operational risk. Enterprises cannot assume one vendor, one cloud or one regulatory model will work everywhere”.
Chinese AI providers reshape price competition
The report highlights the rapid rise of Chinese AI providers. Peak State Consulting says Chinese providers have moved from under 2% to over 45% of OpenRouter token traffic in twelve months, signalling strong global demand for lower-cost models. The report says DeepSeek, Alibaba Qwen and Baidu ERNIE offer frontier-class performance at prices five to ten times lower than equivalent US models, creating new cost and vendor-selection questions for enterprises. Peak State Consulting expects the United States and China to remain the two dominant AI powers, followed by Europe, with adoption also accelerating across India and other Asian markets.
Workforce disruption becomes urgent
Peak State Consulting forecasts that agentic AI will displace 50% of knowledge-worker task workflows by 2028. The report says this may cause considerable job losses in routine knowledge-work roles, while increasing demand for AI product managers, AI programme leaders, AI security specialists, AI legal compliance professionals and AI governance experts. Peak State Consulting says reskilling, redeployment and AI literacy must become board-level priorities. “AI will automate a large share of routine knowledge work”, said Khanna. “The leadership question is whether companies use that power only to cut headcount, or to redesign work and move people into higher-value roles”.
AI is reordering capital markets
The report says AI is now reshaping global capital markets, not just technology companies. Peak State Consulting points to rising investor focus on semiconductors, memory chips, data centres, AI infrastructure and compute capacity. The report also highlights the growing financial weight of economies exposed to AI hardware supply chains. The report says capital markets are beginning to reward companies and countries positioned at the centre of AI infrastructure demand. “AI is becoming a structural force in capital allocation”, said Khanna. “It is changing which companies, sectors and economies investors consider strategically important”.
Practical guide for CEOs, CTOs and CIOs
The 116-page report includes:
1. A $6.40 trillion total AI market forecast for 2030.
2. A $2.60 trillion enterprise-facing AI forecast for 2030.
3. Ten strategic AI predictions.
4. An enterprise AI implementation guide.
5. AI readiness and operating model frameworks.
6. Governance templates and deployment checklists.
7. AI vendor-selection guidance.
8. Analysis of agentic AI, sovereign AI, AI economics and workforce impact.
Peak State Consulting says the report is designed to help senior leaders move from AI interest to AI execution. “The window for passive observation is closing”, said Khanna. “Enterprises do not need to chase every new model. They need a disciplined roadmap, strong governance and the courage to redesign how work gets done”.
Report Availability
Enterprise AI: Opportunities, Challenges & The C-Suite Imperative is available as a free download from Peak State Consulting. The report is intended for CEOs, CTOs, CIOs, boards, investors, transformation leaders and senior technology decision-makers. Free to download from
https://peakstate.com/market-reports
Image Credit: Peak State
Source: Tahawul Tech

