The Uncomfortable Truth About AI in Finance That No One Wants to Admit
There is a lot of confidence right now in finance.
AI will fix reporting.
AI will speed up forecasting.
AI will improve insight.
AI will free finance teams up to be more strategic.
Some of that will be true.
But there is an uncomfortable truth that rarely gets discussed.
Most finance teams are not ready for AI.
And AI is not the reason why.
The illusion many finance leaders are buying into
AI has become a convenient shortcut.
A way to believe that technology will solve problems that are actually rooted in people, structure and decision making.
If the tools are smart enough, the thinking will improve.
If the dashboards are better, decisions will follow.
If the output is faster, the function will become more strategic.
That logic sounds attractive. It is also flawed.
AI does not fix weak judgement.
It does not fix unclear ownership.
It does not fix poor challenge.
It does not fix a finance team that lacks confidence or commercial understanding.
It simply accelerates whatever already exists.
Why AI exposes finance weaknesses rather than solving them
In many organisations, finance already produces more information than the business can properly use.
More reports have not led to better decisions.
More data has not led to clearer strategy.
More analysis has not led to better outcomes.
AI increases volume, speed and sophistication. But it does not tell you:
- Which numbers actually matter
- What trade offs to make
- When to challenge a decision
- When to say no
Those are human responsibilities.
If a finance team struggles to influence decisions today, AI will not suddenly give it a stronger voice tomorrow.
The real risk leaders are ignoring
The real risk is not that AI replaces finance professionals.
The real risk is that it exposes which finance roles never moved beyond production in the first place.
As automation removes transactional work, the remaining roles become more exposed.
They require:
- Judgement
- Commercial awareness
- Confidence
- Influence
- Accountability for decisions
Some people step into that space naturally.
Others retreat from it.
AI does not create that divide. It reveals it.
Where most organisations are getting this wrong
Many businesses are investing heavily in tools while changing very little about:
- How finance roles are defined
- What finance people are hired for
- How performance is measured
- Where decision ownership sits
So finance teams are asked to be more strategic without being hired, structured or rewarded to do so.
That is not transformation. It is expectation inflation.
Why hiring matters more than technology right now
Two organisations can implement the same AI tools.
One gets better decisions.
The other gets faster confusion.
The difference is not software. It is capability.
The businesses seeing real value from AI are:
- Hiring people who can interpret and challenge outputs
- Building finance roles around decisions, not reports
- Developing commercial confidence, not just technical depth
- Being honest about who can step up and who cannot
They understand that AI raises the bar. It does not lower it.
The conversation finance leaders need to have
The most important AI question for finance is not:
What tools should we buy?
It is:
Do we have the people who can actually use this well?
Because AI does not replace weak finance functions.
It makes their weaknesses impossible to hide.
And for leaders willing to face that honestly, that is not a threat.



