{"slug": "ai-is-freeing-up-capital-most-companies-have-no-plan-for-what-comes-next", "title": "AI is freeing up capital. Most companies have no plan for what comes next", "summary": "AI tools are freeing up capital through efficiency gains, but most companies lack a reinvestment strategy to sustain long-term growth, according to a new analysis. CIOs face the challenge of deciding how to reinvest AI gains into stronger tooling, governance, and upskilling to avoid plateauing after early wins.", "body_md": "AI tools today enable faster processes, leaner operations and lower costs, making efficiency wins the new baseline. However, for many businesses, the strategy stops at those first wins.\n\nThis has created a growing leadership blind spot: Once you achieve AI ROI, how do you make the most of it? If there is no clear reinvestment strategy, AI gains burn out quickly and disappear into the business without meaningfully compounding their value.\n\nFor CIOs, the next challenge is not just proving AI can make the business more efficient but deciding how those gains can build a stronger company and sustain growth over the long term.\n\nOne of the smartest ways to reinvest AI gains is to improve how the business evaluates what is worth building in the first place.\n\nLeaders who chase “cool” use cases without defining the business impact or path to ROI upfront often end up with systems that drain funds without creating compounding returns. Instead, a clear reinvestment strategy uses AI to assess the strongest use cases before scaling up.\n\nAI tools today can help teams move from idea to prototype to impact analysis much faster than before. That makes it easier to identify which projects have a credible path to ROI and which ones can be filed away. Access to these quick insights allows businesses to test whether a use case has real value before committing larger engineering or model costs.\n\nThis is especially crucial right now as [AI is becoming more costly as businesses scale it](https://www.idc.com/resource-center/blog/ai-infrastructure-spending-caps-historic-year-at-90-billion-in-q4-2025-2029-spending-to-eclipse-1-trillion/). What looked inexpensive in early pilots can become far pricier once it is embedded in day-to-day work and as AI providers tokenize and meter its use. The more central AI becomes, the more intentional leaders need to be about where it is used, what it actually returns and how to reinvest those gains.\n\nNot every workflow belongs in the same model. Not every task needs an agent. As AI vendors mature and monetization models evolve, the businesses that will win will be the ones that make those distinctions early, reinvest accordingly and keep building ahead of customer needs rather than reacting to them. Not every workflow belongs in the same model. Not every task needs an agent.\n\nOnce AI activations start to show dividends, it’s time to reinvest in stronger tooling. This should include new AI tools that continue to advance the business, as well as continued investment in what has already worked. That compounding effect is ultimately what separates businesses that sustain AI-driven growth from those that plateau after early wins.\n\nI’ve seen firsthand the benefits of investing in new tools that make AI more usable, repeatable and valuable in workflows. For example, automated product management tools enable rapid prototyping and product rationalization. Decision intelligence platforms can help teams simulate scenarios. Customer behavior modeling tools can help predict churn and shift customer demand patterns. These advanced solutions can help teams move from an idea to a working concept in days instead of months.\n\nSmart reinvestment is about building the right technical mix for the outcomes the business [needs], rather than funding more AI for its own sake. To maximize impact, start with tooling for governance and upskilling.\n\nAs AI usage spreads and matures across teams, products and functions, a strategic policy framework becomes all the more vital. CIOs should work to reinforce the governance foundations already in place so they can support broader adoption, rather than rebuilding new policy from scratch each time AI usage expands. This means reinvesting in shared standards, oversight mechanisms and supporting roles that make governance more durable and practical over time.\n\nWithout doubling down on governance, businesses risk creating siloed, disconnected pockets of experimentation. Those pockets quickly become expensive to monitor and difficult to secure, creating further risk to consistency, compliance and trust. The consequence is often wasted spend as experiments stall or overlap, or outcomes that are too fragmented to scale.\n\nWhen businesses keep governance investment at the center of their reinvestment strategy, it becomes a force multiplier. It reduces duplication across teams, creates more commonality across products and makes it easier to expand AI use without increasing fragmentation or risk.\n\nSmart tools only create real value when people are equipped to use them well. That is why reinvestment should go beyond technology alone.\n\nAs AI tools become more powerful and accurate, the skills barrier to building something useful is dropping. Employees can get much closer to a viable concept much faster with AI, but that only works if businesses create learning pathways, academies and practical enablement that help teams use these tools well.\n\nSmarter tooling can help product, operations and technology teams collaborate with fewer layers between idea and execution. As employees build new skills, they can stay closer to a single initiative from start to finish. That reduces handoffs, empowers employees to learn new skills and offers a more direct path from the original idea to the final result.\n\nOver the next few years, the businesses that pull ahead are not simply going to be the ones with the most AI pilots or the biggest efficiency gains. They will be the ones that invest AI ROI in bridging what has long been disconnected: systems, teams, workflows and ecosystems.\n\nIn telecom, for example, AI is already creating savings inside billing operations and other back-office work tied to the BSS layer. The smart move for telcos is not to stop at those savings, but to reinvest them in connecting their BSS and OSS, where fragmentation and siloes have long slowed telcos down.\n\nThink about what that means in practice: instead of billing, service configuration and network operations functioning as separate systems with separate handoffs, AI can help orchestrate them. That makes it easier to move from order to activation to support with less internal friction, better visibility and fewer breakdowns between what was sold and what is actually delivered.\n\nFor the customer, that means a broadband outage, plan change or installation appointment is handled as one connected journey rather than a chain of handoffs. The outcome is a more connected operating model that makes the customer experience feel far less complex.\n\nThe same logic applies across industries. In banking, a customer with a mortgage, checking account and credit card at the same institution is often still treated as three separate relationships – because the underlying systems do not communicate. AI orchestration can change that, giving banks a unified view of the customer and employees the context to act on it.\n\nNot using AI to do the same work faster, but using AI dividends to build a business that works better. That is what smart investment looks like.\n\nAI can absolutely free up capital. That, however, is only the first chapter.\n\nThe bigger story is what leaders choose to do next: reinvest in better tooling, more consistent governance, smarter workforce enablement and operating models built to connect across silos. The payoff will be a more resilient, agile business ready for what’s next.\n\n**This article is published as part of the Foundry Expert Contributor Network.****Want to join?**", "url": "https://wpnews.pro/news/ai-is-freeing-up-capital-most-companies-have-no-plan-for-what-comes-next", "canonical_source": "https://www.cio.com/article/4195747/ai-is-freeing-up-capital-most-companies-have-no-plan-for-what-comes-next.html", "published_at": "2026-07-13 10:00:00+00:00", "updated_at": "2026-07-13 10:21:02.513754+00:00", "lang": "en", "topics": ["artificial-intelligence", "ai-tools", "ai-policy", "ai-infrastructure", "ai-startups"], "entities": ["CIO"], "alternates": {"html": "https://wpnews.pro/news/ai-is-freeing-up-capital-most-companies-have-no-plan-for-what-comes-next", "markdown": "https://wpnews.pro/news/ai-is-freeing-up-capital-most-companies-have-no-plan-for-what-comes-next.md", "text": "https://wpnews.pro/news/ai-is-freeing-up-capital-most-companies-have-no-plan-for-what-comes-next.txt", "jsonld": "https://wpnews.pro/news/ai-is-freeing-up-capital-most-companies-have-no-plan-for-what-comes-next.jsonld"}}