Skip to main content
Cloud and AI concept
Corporate

Readiness Report market highlight: United States

Report | 23 Feb 2026 | Read time: 1 min

The Kyndryl Readiness Report combines the insights from 3,700 leaders from 21 countries with data from Kyndryl Bridge, the company’s AI-powered business platform, to show the real-world IT and workforce strategies that get businesses ready for the future.

Business and technology leaders in the United States diverge from their global peers across a few key areas. They tend to be more confident about their cloud strategy and report being farther along their AI transformation journey. These organizations are well-poised to convert early momentum into sustained competitive advantage.

While U.S.-based companies report lower concern across many external risks, overall readiness remains challenged, especially in core infrastructure and resilience. At the same time, U.S. leaders report higher confidence in their innovation culture, greater AI usage and more deliberate cloud strategy than global peers – an important mix as organizations move from AI experimentation to scalable value.

40%

of U.S. leaders say their IT infrastructure is completely ready to manage future risks, despite active modernization efforts (on par with global average)

4 in 10

U.S. leaders say they reached their current cloud environment “by accident,” significantly below the global average of 56%, signaling a more coordinated cloud strategy

82%

of U.S. leaders are investing in AI-powered cybersecurity capabilities, making it the top AI investment priority (vs. 75% global average)

67%

of technical employees and 44% of non-technical employees use AI weekly – above the global averages of 61% and 43%.

52%

of U.S. organizations report positive ROI on their AI investments, up 12 points from the previous year

87%

of U.S. leaders say cloud investments have allowed their organization to use AI more easily than they otherwise could

U.S. strengths: cloud discipline and AI absorption

Compared to global peers, U.S. organizations are less likely to describe their cloud environments as accidental and more likely to report that cloud investments directly enable AI adoption. U.S. cloud spend growth is also lower than the global average, suggesting a shift from rapid expansion toward intentional optimization.

AI adoption is broadening across roles, and improving returns indicate that U.S. organizations are beginning to move from experimentation to execution. Strong technical-team adoption shortens feedback loops and accelerates the path to scale.

Where U.S. leaders see friction

Despite optimism, gaps remain. Significant cyber-related outages are common, and regulatory or compliance concerns are the number one barrier to scaling technology investments in the U.S. Innovation confidence is high, yet many organizations still struggle to move pilots beyond proof-of-concept.

What U.S. leaders can do next

modernize icon

Modernize core infrastructure to improve resilience and readiness

cloud icon

Treat cloud as a designed, governed capability—not just a destination

Scale icon

Scale AI where ROI is already provable, particularly in cybersecurity

data strategy icon

Engineer for compliance and data sovereignty from the start

Together, these actions can help U.S. organizations convert early cloud and AI advantages into durable, long-term competitiveness.

Get insights in your inbox

Subscribe to the newsletter

Speak to our experts.

Have questions or want to learn more?