UK Businesses Embracing AI but Failing to Measure Value According to Qlik

New research reveals productivity and ROI gaps across departments, with IT leading the way and HR lagging

London, UK – New research from Qlik®, a global leader in data integration, data quality, analytics, and artificial intelligence, today reveals a striking disconnect between the promise of AI and its measurable impact on UK business productivity.

The study, based on insights from 250 business and IT leaders in the UK, shows that despite aggressive investment in AI, many organisations are still struggling to translate pilot projects into productivity gains, and even fewer can tie those gains to clear financial KPIs.

AI is everywhere, but results remain inconsistent

Despite widespread deployment, productivity gains for AI continue to be inconsistent. More than half of business and IT leaders report that fewer than 50% of their AI projects have delivered measurable improvements. Even more concerning, only 11% of respondents say the majority of their initiatives (over 75%) have led to tangible gains.

This is compounded by a lack of financial clarity, with just 51% of organisations using KPIs tied directly to business performance to evaluate AI initiatives. 44% admit their teams’ perceptions of AI’s productivity gains don’t align with the actual outcomes.

“AI adoption is high, but impact remains patchy,” said James Fisher, Chief Strategy Officer at Qlik. “This gap between hype and reality is a wake-up call. Businesses need to focus on measurement, alignment, and building the data infrastructure that enables AI to deliver at scale.”

Technical functions leading the way but others lagging behind

Where AI is making a mark, it is largely in technical domains. IT and cybersecurity departments are the standout beneficiaries, with 81% of leaders reporting improvements in these areas. But other business functions aren’t seeing the same uplift.

HR and finance remain on the margins of AI success, with 37% and 30% of respondents respectively stating these departments have seen the least tangible benefit. This indicates that the full potential of AI is not being realised across the business, with innovation and investment still concentrated in siloes.

Operational gaps - not funding - are the biggest blockers

Only a quarter of respondents cited budget as a top-three barrier to AI success. Instead, the biggest challenges are operational, with nearly half (49%) of businesses saying they lack the internal skills to effectively integrate AI with their existing analytics and business intelligence systems.

Other top concerns include incompatible tools and platforms (36%) and a lack of real-time data integration (37%). These infrastructure and capability gaps are limiting the returns on AI investment, even in well-funded organisations.

“This is exactly where Qlik’s Open Lakehouse architecture delivers value – breaking down silos, enabling real-time integration and supporting smarter decisions through analytics,” added Fisher.

Too many projects stuck in pilot mode

The research also suggests that businesses are still operating in a proof-of-concept mindset. Nearly a quarter (23%) say that the majority of their AI use cases (75% or more) are still in the experimental phase. A further 11% report that virtually all of their initiatives are still in early-stage pilots.

This signals a major disconnect between perception and reality. Many businesses believe they are ready to scale, but remain stuck at the starting line when it comes to operationalising AI at scale.

Clearer KPIs and better tools essential for progress

Many businesses still struggle to measure AI success effectively. While 89% agree that a unified data strategy is key to assessing ROI, only half say they have the tools to connect AI outputs with business performance.

There’s also strong demand for better tools and transparency. 57% say improved data integration and analytics would help communicate AI’s business value to stakeholders, while 55% want more visibility into how AI models make decisions. Stronger collaboration between IT and other business units (49%) and clearer, outcome-focused KPIs (46%) are also seen as critical to moving from experimentation to impact.

“To realise AI’s full potential, businesses must move beyond experimentation and focus on execution,” said Fisher. “That means scalable tools, integrated strategies and collaboration across every function. That’s the transition Qlik is enabling today.”

Methodology

Research conducted by Censuswide, polling 250 UK business and IT leaders in May, 2025.

About Qlik

Qlik converts complex data landscapes into actionable insights, driving strategic business outcomes. Serving over 40,000 global customers, our portfolio provides advanced, enterprise-grade AI/ML, data integration, and analytics. Our AI/ML tools, both practical and scalable, lead to better decisions, faster. We excel in data integration and governance, offering comprehensive solutions that work with diverse data sources. Intuitive analytics from Qlik uncover hidden patterns, empowering teams to address complex challenges and seize new opportunities. As strategic partners, our platform-agnostic technology and expertise make our customers more competitive.

Media Contact

Craig Brophy
craig.brophy@qlik.com
+44 (0)7795 662888

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