INTELLIGENT TECHNOLOGY
DATA GOVERNANCE
New global CDO report reveals data governance and AI literacy as key accelerators in AI adoption
Research from Informatica finds that nearly half of organisations have adopted Agentic AI, yet 90 % of data leaders fear data issues are being ignored.
Informatica from Salesforce, a leader in enterprise AI-powered cloud data management, together with Deloitte, has unveiled CDO Insights 2026: Data governance and the trust paradox of data and AI literacy take centre stage, revealing that while organisations are rapidly accelerating their use of Artificial Intelligence, many continue to face challenges around data readiness and data and AI literacy that are limiting the value of their investments.
The study shows that AI has firmly moved from experimentation to execution. Nearly seven in 10 organisations( 69 %) have now embedded Generative AI into business practices, up from 48 % in 2024 and 45 % in 2023. Momentum is also building around more advanced use cases, with 47 % of organisations already adopting Agentic AI, which can act autonomously to achieve defined goals.
However, as adoption rises, data leaders are increasingly concerned about the foundations underpinning these initiatives. According to the report, 91 % say data reliability remains a barrier to moving more Generative AI initiatives from pilot to production, while 90 % are concerned that new AI pilots are progressing without resolving the data reliability issues uncovered by earlier efforts.
This caution from data leaders stands in contrast to the broader workforce’ s perception, giving rise to what Informatica terms a‘ trust paradox’. While data and AI leaders remain acutely aware of data quality and governance shortcomings, 65 % of respondents say that most or all of their organisation trusts the data being used in AI efforts.
75 % report that their workforce needs stronger data literacy skills, while 74 % say greater AI literacy is required.
The urgency is heightened by the pace of change. Almost a third of organisations( 31 %) expect to adopt Agentic AI by the end of this year, yet a lack of Agentic AI experience already ranks among the top three challenges preventing AI agents from reaching production. Without immediate investment in skills and governance, organisations risk falling behind their own AI ambitions.
Encouragingly, the findings also suggest that upskilling could reduce overreliance on external providers and accelerate innovation. Today, 54 % of organisations plan to use vendorsupplied AI agents, compared to 44 % that expect to develop them internally. On average, organisations anticipate partnering with eight separate vendors to support AI management priorities in 2026, most commonly to improve data trust. Building stronger internal data and AI capabilities could help organisations become more self-sufficient and move faster.
Yasser Shawky, Vice President, Emerging Markets( MEA), Informatica from Salesforce
As a result, data leaders believe targeted training is critical to closing this gap and enabling AI to scale safely and effectively. More than three quarters( 76 %) say their company’ s visibility and governance have not fully kept pace with employees’ use of AI. At the same time,
Yasser Shawky, Vice President, Emerging Markets( MEA), Informatica from Salesforce, said:“ Across the Middle East, we are seeing increased momentum around AI, driven by national strategies, digital government programmes and large-scale enterprise transformation. Our findings show that ambition is not the challenge, readiness is. To sustain this pace, organisations in the region must ensure that governance, data management and skills development evolve just as quickly as AI adoption itself. Those that invest now in data trust and AI literacy will be far better positioned to turn innovation into lasting competitive advantage.” •
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