The specific obstacles are well documented. Forty-two percent of organizations cite insufficient AI talent, while 50% point to implementation and maintenance costs as their primary constraint. A more subtle challenge is emerging: roughly 10% of workers become "AI superusers" while others resist adoption, creating unequal value distribution within organizations. The transition from traditional delegation-based work to AI-augmented processes requires short-term operational disruption with unclear near-term returns, deterring comprehensive change at most companies.
Attorneys should monitor 2026 as a potential inflection point. Deloitte research suggests the opportunity from AI-native organizational approaches reaches approximately $7 trillion. As this delta widens between transformed and traditional organizations, competitive pressure will intensify. For in-house counsel, this means anticipating questions about organizational restructuring, talent acquisition, and the employment law implications of uneven AI adoption across workforces. The legal risk landscape will shift as companies that delay transformation face both operational disadvantage and potential liability exposure from inconsistent AI deployment.