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Home - Artificial Intelligence - How CIOs Can Navigate the Pressure and Possibility for AI
Artificial Intelligence Articles Data Protection Security

How CIOs Can Navigate the Pressure and Possibility for AI

Joel CarusoneBy Joel CarusoneOctober 14, 20254 Mins Read
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CIOs find themselves at a crossroads. The rapid advancement of AI has reshaped how businesses operate, with the adoption of AI taking place nearly twice as fast as the internet or personal computing did, according to a recent McKinsey report. 

This change brings fresh challenges for IT leaders. Unlocking AI’s value requires more than deployment; CIOs must ensure their company’s underlying technology environment is robust, secure, and scalable. It means managing the complexity of an expanding tech stack, IT skills gaps, and a distributed workforce.  

This already represents a challenge, with 75% of CIOs reporting difficulty balancing AI usage in the enterprise with existing IT operational excellence demands, and these issues will only increase with more scrutiny on IT budgets.

While demands constantly evolve, some realities have become clear. CIOs cannot solve these issues on their own. They must enable IT leaders and teams, streamline critical processes, and provide the resources and strategic guidance needed to achieve their goals. Success hinges on three key takeaways. 

AI Strategy is Business Strategy 

AI is no longer an isolated technology. It is now deeply embedded in the foundation of modern business operations. With this integration, CIOs and other leaders will increasingly be held accountable for AI-driven outcomes, both positive and negative.  

Since AI is no longer a niche concern delegated to IT specialists, the responsibility also falls on executive leadership to understand AI strategies and ensure they are both robust and impactful. 

CIOs must move beyond fragmented approaches and instead champion AI initiatives that unify various departments. AI implementation should break down silos, foster interdepartmental collaboration, and align with overarching business objectives.  

From governance frameworks to ethical considerations, a well-structured strategy will ensure responsible and effective AI deployments. CIOs who proactively address AI complexities will mitigate risk and position their organisations for sustainable innovation. 

Differentiation vs. Resilience 

While technological advancements provide a competitive advantage, innovation must not come at the cost of security and stability. The urge to use AI everywhere should be balanced with a commitment to fundamental IT and security best practices, which include human oversight over every step in the decision-making process. 

In a fast-evolving digital ecosystem, strong data management underpins resilience. Backups, cloud storage, rigorous data audits, and automated device management are the foundation of a sustainable technology strategy. 

However, they must be incorporated with an understanding of the current and future technology landscape. For example, the growth of SaaS applications and connected devices means IT teams must implement solutions that support not just these endpoints but also the users behind them. 

With the right strategies and skills, CIOs can drive innovation while safeguarding their organisations from potential vulnerabilities such as unpatched systems, shadow applications and unauthorised access. A balanced approach, one that fosters both technological curiosity and operational stability, as well as always keeping humans in the loop, will be key to long term success. 

Bridging the Gaps: Addressing Key IT Challenges 

IT teams remain stretched thin, and this strain will only continue to intensify. With IT managers often expected to oversee thousands of devices and applications, CIOs must act as advocates for their teams to senior leadership. 

Introducing AI or any other technology into the mix will not solve IT’s challenges alone. However, the strategic implementation of automation can alleviate much of the burden associated with routine, time-consuming tasks. 

Automation, particularly in areas such as configurations, installations, monitoring, endpoint management, and network operations, has the potential to improve consistency, reduce human error, and free up IT professionals to focus on strategic work. With these automation-driven efficiencies, CIOs can enhance productivity, reduce burnout, and create a more agile IT environment.  

The Next Generation 

As we move towards 2026, CIOs should focus on enabling IT leaders to integrate AI into broader business objectives where appropriate, while safeguarding business-critical systems’ stability and security. 

With a proactive, strategic approach, businesses can embrace meaningful transformation, greater efficiency, and set the foundations for long-term success. 

Joel Carusone
Joel Carusone

Joel Carusone is the Senior Vice President of Data and Artificial Intelligence at NinjaOne. A proven technical leader with an aptitude for innovation and success, Joel’s primary responsibility is to oversee research, development, and deployment of secure AI technology practices inside NinjaOne. Prior to NinjaOne, Carusone served as Chief Technology Officer at Zeno Technologies, where he oversaw product innovation and development for the energy-focused software development company. Before that, he held various technical roles at enterprise customer data platform Radius Intelligence (acquired by SoftBank-backed startup Kabbage in 2019), where he worked his way up to CEO. Joel holds a bachelor's degree in biology and information sciences from Syracuse University.

    The opinions expressed in this post belong to the individual contributors and do not necessarily reflect the views of Information Security Buzz.

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