If most companies are losing money on AI, who’s actually winning? According to MIT’s new State of AI in Business 2025 report, it’s the 5% of organizations that treat AI less like software and more like infrastructure.
These winners don’t chase hype. They focus on specific, boring, but high-value workflows: automating contract reviews, summarizing customer calls, or speeding up coding tasks. They don’t build clunky tools from scratch. Instead, they partner with vendors, demand customization, and hold them accountable for business results not flashy demos.
And it’s paying off:
- Companies cutting $2–10M a year by replacing BPO contracts in customer service and admin.
- Marketing teams slashing 30% of agency costs using AI for content and analytics.
- Risk departments saving millions by automating compliance and financial checks.
Notice what’s missing? Mass layoffs. The real disruption is happening outside the payroll companies are spending less on outsourcing, agencies, and consultants. Inside, they’re hiring people with AI literacy as a basic skill, especially younger workers who are often ahead of veterans in using tools like ChatGPT.
The report also warns of what’s next: the rise of the Agentic Web, where AI agents won’t just assist with tasks, but will negotiate contracts, discover suppliers, and run workflows across the internet without human supervision.
The clock is ticking. Enterprises are locking in relationships with adaptive, memory-capable AI vendors. The winners are already building the future. The rest risk being stuck in pilot purgatory while the AI train speeds away.
