AUSTIN, Texas – A new report released today by X-Team, a global leader in on-demand technical talent, reveals a massive disconnect between corporate leadership and the employees on the front lines of artificial intelligence implementation.
The AI Talent Readiness Report found that while 92% of executives feel confident in their organization’s ability to source AI talent, only 26% of individual contributors share that sentiment. This “seniority gap” suggests that while leaders may have a clear vision for AI strategy, the infrastructure to execute that vision is severely lacking.
Key findings from the survey of over 300 U.S. business and tech leaders include:
- Hiring Delays: Despite high confidence levels, 50% of organizations admit it would take three months or more to staff a single cross-functional AI team.
- Lack of Measurement: Only 19% of companies currently tie AI value to financial or operating metrics, making it difficult to justify continued investment.
- Governance Gaps: While 36% of companies have published an AI policy, enforcement remains inconsistent, leaving many teams “frozen” by unclear frameworks.
- The HR Disconnect: HR leaders reported just 29% confidence in sourcing AI talent, compared to 78% for specialized AI and data teams.
Study: Executives Overconfident as Companies Struggle to Build AI Workforces
“Most AI readiness conversations start with the wrong questions about what tools to buy,” said Amit Sion, CEO of X-Team. “The organizations that actually build durable AI capability start by asking who owns AI and what that means for everyone else.”
The report suggests that companies using embedded, long-term partner teams see significantly higher value capture (85%) compared to those relying solely on internal teams (42%). Experts warn that without standardized training and clear role definitions, the gap between AI ambition and actual capability will only continue to widen.
